Wk8a - Clinical Aspects - Candidacy and Ax Flashcards

1
Q

Considering the proportion of CI candidates compared to hearing aid candidates, which technology do you think has more invested into it and why?

A

Hearing aids - there is a higher number of candidates/potential buyers

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2
Q

Why should we treat hearing loss?

A

To protect our auditory pathways

  • neural plasticity means we need to use it or lose it
  • loss can occur through neural degeneration and recruitment to other sensory systems
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3
Q

Name 3 goals of treating hearing loss

A

Acquiring/maintaining basic auditory functions

  • sound detection
  • sound discrimination
  • sound localization
  • emotion identification
  • music appreciation
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4
Q

What is prelinqual and postlingual deafness?

A

Deafness acquired before and after acquired language

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5
Q

What is peri-lingual deafness?

A

Hearing loss that occurs during the process of acquiring language

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6
Q

What does “total communication” refer to?

A

The use of any combination of signs, finger spelling, listening with amplification, lip-reading, facial expression, body language, reading and writing

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7
Q

Name the main members of the CI team (including organizations)

A
CI candidate/parents
Family physician
CI team within the CI program
Ministry of health (financing)
CI manufacturers
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8
Q

What are the 5 CI programs in Ontario?

A

Pediatric:

  • Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario
  • Hospital for Sick Children
  • London Health Sciences Centre

Adults:

  • Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
  • Ottawa Civic Hospital
  • London Health Sciences Centre
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9
Q

Which professionals make up the implant team?

A
Audiologists
ENT surgeons
Psychologist/psychometrist
Social worker
Child-Life specialist
Speech Language Pathologist
Auditory-verbal therapist
  • this team assesses candidacy for each individual case
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10
Q

Who are the 4 certified CI manufacturers in Canada?

A

Advanced Bionics (US; owed by Sonova (phonak, unitron…))

Cochlear Americas (Australia)

Med-EL Corp (Austria)

Oticon Medical (France; owned by William Demant (Oticon, Bernafon, Interacoustics, GSI…)

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11
Q

What is the role of the family doctor?

A

Patients need a referral to be a CI candidate (required by physician)

  • early referrals are paramount to pt outcomes
  • initial contact of the centre can often be made by others
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12
Q

What allows a pt to become a CI candidate?

A
  • pt has tried HAs and does not receive benefit
  • pt’s HL is so profound that appropriate fit of HAs is not possible
  • pt has no medical or psycho-social contraindications (e.g anaesthesia, surgery, nothing that will limit benefit…)
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13
Q

What are the audiological criteria for CI candidacy?

A

Thresholds (PTA of 500 Hz, 1 and 2 kHz)

Speech perception scores (scores of 30% or worse on either the MLNT or Lexical Neighbourhood Test for children)

**Both criteria need to be met

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14
Q

Why don’t we just use threshold data for CI candidacy?

A

A person’s percentage does not accurately reflect the pt’s function or ability to cope with the HL

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15
Q

Currently, in North America cochlear implantation is not approved earlier than ___ months of age

A

12 months/1 year of age

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16
Q

What are the CI criteria for younger children?

A

12-24 months of age

  • profound bilateral SNHL
  • limited benefit from HAs (little ears, IT-MAIS)
  • no medical contraindications
  • spoken language as a primary mode of communication
  • educational placement with strong auditory component
  • realistic expectations by family (parents should not expect normal hearing or overnight results)
  • strong motivation and family support
17
Q

What are the CI criteria for older children?

A

25 months - 17 years 11 months

  • severe to profound (70+ dB HL) bilateral SNHL
  • open set speech perception score of less than or equal to 30% (MLNT or LNT dependant on child’s age)
  • all other criteria are the same as the 12-24 month age range
18
Q

What are the CI criteria for adults (Sunnybrook)?

A

18 years old or older

  • moderate to severe/profound bilateral SNHL
  • limited benefit from optimally fitted amplification (AzBio <50% in the CI ear and = 60% in opposite ear or binaurally)
  • post-lingually deafened, or pre-lingually deafened but are oral communicators
  • all other criteria same as older children
19
Q

How have CI candidacy requirements changed over the years?

A

1985 - adults, poslingual, profound SNHL, 0% speech scores

1990 - adults and children, added pre and post-lingual children, profound SNHL, 0% speech scores

1998/2000 - added severe category, 50% or less HINT

20
Q

What change to candidacy occurred in 2019?

A

FDA approved Med-EL’s CI’s for single-sided deafness and asymmetric hearing loss

21
Q

Describe the general assessment process

A

Patient/Family/Professional Inquiry

  • > Questionnaire/Info Package
  • > Information Session
  • > Audiological Evaluation (possible HA trial period)
  • > medical evaluation
  • > speech and language ax (possible aud/verbal therapy
  • > psychological eval
  • > social work eval
  • > CI team meeting (assess candidacy)
  • > either approved (surgery and f/u) or declined (annual f/u)
22
Q

Describe the typical pre-implant audiological assessment

A
  • ABR - objective estimate and ax of AN (if not already done through IHP)
  • behaviour audiology ax (each ear)
  • ME measurements
  • OAEs (hair cell health, if not done by IHP)
  • amplification ax and verification (if pt already has HAs)
  • HA fitting (if not already fit) - as part of candidacy, children undergo 6 month trial emphasizing development of aud/oral skills
  • speech perception testing (aided and unaided)
  • function auditory performance and communication (HHI, AHIP…)
  • varies in length (age, health, etc)
  • requires significant collaboration b/w professional
23
Q

What are contraindications to CI’s?

A
  • lack of AN (narrow meatus on imaging, ABR results)
  • mastoid cavity - relative contraindication only (depends on skill of surgeon)
  • lack of commitment or social support
  • unrealistic expectations
  • severe malformations of inner ear (most mild and moderate malformations can be implanted)
  • general health (cannot withstand general anaesthesia)