Implant Of Cochlear Device May Cause Brain's 'Hearing Center' To Reorganize
Main Category: Hearing / DeafnessAlso Included In: Medical Devices / Diagnostics; Neurology / Neuroscience
Article Date: 25 Jul 2007 - 12:00 PDT
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Cochlear implants -- electronic devices inserted surgically in the ear to allow deaf people to hear -- may restore normal auditory pathways in the brain even after many years of deafness.
The results imply that the brain can reorganize sound processing centers or press into service latent ones based on sound stimulation. Jeanne Guiraud, PhD, and colleagues at the University of Lyon, Edouard Herriot University Hospital, and Advanced Bionics, a firm that makes cochlear implants, worked with deaf subjects from 16 to 74 years old and found that younger subjects and those with a shorter history of deafness showed changes that mirrored patterns in people with normal hearing more closely. The results were published in the Journal of Neuroscience.
"The results imply a restoration to some extent of the normal organization through the use of the cochlear implant," says Manuel Don, PhD, of the House Ear Institute in Los Angeles. "They also claim to find ties between the degree of restored organization and a hearing task. Such ties are of enormous importance in evaluating cochlear implant benefits." Don was not involved in this study.
Guiraud and her team studied 13 profoundly deaf adults who had received cochlear implants, on average, eight months before the study. Electrical stimulation to the ear allowed the team to locate where in the brain's auditory cortex various frequencies were processed and come up with a map for these tones. Their results demonstrated that in people who had cochlear implants for at least three months, normal frequency organization was somewhat restored.
"Our results strongly suggest that the recipient's auditory cortex presents a tonotopic organization that resembles the frequency maps of normal-hearing subjects," says Guiraud.
In the future, the team hopes to determine in detail the ways in which these maps may change as a result of cochlear implants by studying subjects immediately following implant surgery.
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The work was a supported by a grant from Advanced Bionics Europe.
The Journal of Neuroscience is published by the Society for Neuroscience, an organization of more than 36,500 basic scientists and clinicians who study the brain and nervous system.
Source: Sara Harris
Society for Neuroscience
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MLA
14 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/77657.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/77657.php.
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Knowledge
posted by yvonne on 15 Sep 2007 at 12:35 pmthis interesting as my son is deaf and has been since 13 months old from menis./it wouldd have been more informative to know if the implant worked better on a person who lost their hearing from an accident or age or from an illness/but all and all i found your information interesting
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