Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2012 Oct;60(10):1936-45. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2012.04150.x. Epub 2012 Sep 13.
To review studies investigating cochlear implant (CI) outcomes in older adults, and to develop a conceptual framework demonstrating important interactions between characteristics of hearing disability, aging, and the CI intervention.
Review of English literature with titles containing the words "cochlear implant" and generic term referring to older adults or numerical value for age greater than 65.
Hearing loss is a prevalent consequence of aging and poses special challenges for older adults. Particularly when superimposed on other age-related conditions, presbycusis (age-related hearing loss) places older adults at risk for social isolation and associated psychological and general health sequelae. The increasing cognitive demand of verbal communication and the diminished sense of social and physical connectedness can contribute to a feeling of vulnerability and poor health that worsens with advancing presbycusis. This cascade of downstream effects of hearing loss has implications for the self-assessment of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and resulting estimates of associated costs. There is accumulating evidence of a potential role for CI in older adults with poor word understanding despite conventional hearing aid use. This review of the literature provides strong evidence of the benefits of restoring communication capacity in the deaf and hard-of-hearing geriatric population. There is, however, a lack of attention to communication performance in the real world and HRQoL outcomes, and significant gaps in knowledge regarding how CI rehabilitation interacts with changing psychosocial and functional status with aging.
A broader conceptual framework than is currently available for the role of CI rehabilitation in the management of severe-to-profound hearing loss in older adults is proposed. It is posited that the use of such a model in future investigations is needed to guide multidisciplinary investigations into the unique challenges of hearing loss in older adults and may open new opportunities for innovation.
回顾研究人工耳蜗植入(CI)在老年人中的效果,并提出一个概念框架,展示听力障碍、衰老和 CI 干预之间的重要相互作用。
对包含“人工耳蜗植入”和泛指老年人的通用术语或年龄大于 65 岁的英文文献进行综述。
听力损失是衰老的普遍后果,给老年人带来特殊挑战。特别是当与其他与年龄相关的情况叠加时,老年性聋(与年龄相关的听力损失)使老年人面临社交孤立以及相关心理和一般健康后果的风险。言语交流的认知需求增加,以及社会和身体联系的减弱,可能导致脆弱感和健康状况不佳,这种情况随着老年性聋的发展而恶化。听力损失的这种下游效应级联对健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)的自我评估和相关成本的估算有影响。越来越多的证据表明,对于使用传统助听器但单词理解能力差的老年人,CI 有潜在作用。本文献综述提供了强有力的证据,证明在失聪和重听的老年人群中恢复交流能力的益处。然而,人们对现实世界中的沟通表现和 HRQoL 结果关注不足,并且对于 CI 康复如何与衰老过程中不断变化的心理社会和功能状态相互作用的知识还存在很大差距。
提出了一个比目前老年人严重至极重度听力损失管理中 CI 康复作用的概念框架更为广泛的框架。假设在未来的研究中使用这样的模型,将有助于指导对老年人听力损失独特挑战的多学科研究,并可能为创新开辟新的机会。