Balkenhol Tobias, Wallhäusser-Franke Elisabeth, Rotter Nicole, Servais Jérôme J
Department of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University Medical Center Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany.
Front Neurosci. 2020 Dec 14;14:586119. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2020.586119. eCollection 2020.
Cochlear implants (CI) improve hearing for the severely hearing impaired. With an extension of implantation candidacy, today many CI listeners use a hearing aid on their contralateral ear, referred to as bimodal listening. It is uncertain, however, whether the brains of bimodal listeners can combine the electrical and acoustical sound information and how much CI experience is needed to achieve an improved performance with bimodal listening. Patients with bilateral sensorineural hearing loss undergoing implant surgery were tested in their ability to understand speech in quiet and in noise, before and again 3 and 6 months after provision of a CI. Results of these bimodal listeners were compared to age-matched, normal hearing controls (NH). The benefit of adding a contralateral hearing aid was calculated in terms of head shadow, binaural summation, binaural squelch, and spatial release from masking from the results of a sentence recognition test. Beyond that, bimodal benefit was estimated from the difference in amplitudes and latencies of the N1, P2, and N2 potentials of the brains' auditory evoked response (AEP) toward speech. Data of fifteen participants contributed to the results. CI provision resulted in significant improvement of speech recognition with the CI ear, and in taking advantage of the head shadow effect for understanding speech in noise. Some amount of binaural processing was suggested by a positive binaural summation effect 6 month post-implantation that correlated significantly with symmetry of pure tone thresholds. Moreover, a significant negative correlation existed between binaural summation and latency of the P2 potential. With CI experience, morphology of the N1 and P2 potentials in the AEP response approximated that of NH, whereas, N2 remained different. Significant AEP differences between monaural and binaural processing were shown for NH and for bimodal listeners 6 month post-implantation. Although the grand-averaged difference in N1 amplitude between monaural and binaural listening was similar for NH and the bimodal group, source localization showed group-dependent differences in auditory and speech-relevant cortex, suggesting different processing in the bimodal listeners.
人工耳蜗(CI)可改善重度听力受损者的听力。随着植入适应症的扩大,如今许多使用人工耳蜗的聆听者在对侧耳使用助听器,即所谓的双耳聆听。然而,尚不确定双耳聆听者的大脑能否整合电声和声音信息,以及需要多少人工耳蜗使用经验才能通过双耳聆听提高表现。对接受植入手术的双侧感音神经性听力损失患者在植入人工耳蜗前、植入后3个月和6个月分别测试其在安静和噪声环境下理解言语的能力。将这些双耳聆听者的结果与年龄匹配的正常听力对照组(NH)进行比较。根据句子识别测试结果,从头部阴影、双耳总和、双耳静噪和空间掩蔽释放等方面计算添加对侧助听器的益处。除此之外,通过大脑听觉诱发电位(AEP)对言语的N1、P2和N2电位的幅度和潜伏期差异来估计双耳益处。15名参与者的数据促成了这些结果。植入人工耳蜗后,使用人工耳蜗的耳朵在言语识别方面有显著改善,并利用了头部阴影效应来理解噪声中的言语。植入后6个月的正双耳总和效应表明存在一定程度的双耳处理,且与纯音阈值的对称性显著相关。此外,双耳总和与P2电位的潜伏期之间存在显著负相关。随着人工耳蜗使用经验的增加,AEP反应中N1和P2电位的形态接近正常听力者,但N2仍有差异。植入后6个月,正常听力者和双耳聆听者在单耳和双耳处理之间显示出显著的AEP差异。尽管正常听力者和双耳聆听组在单耳和双耳聆听之间N1幅度的总体平均差异相似,但源定位显示在听觉和言语相关皮层存在组间差异,表明双耳聆听者的处理方式不同。