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Novel Impedance Measures as Biomarker for Intracochlear Fibrosis.
Leblans, Marc; Sismono, Fergio; Vanpoucke, Filiep; van Dinther, Joost; Lerut, Bob; Kuhweide, Rudolf; Offeciers, Erwin; Zarowski, Andrzej.
Afiliação
  • Leblans M; European Institute For ORL, GZA Sint-Augustinus, Antwerp, Belgium. Electronic address: Marc.Leblans@GZA.be.
  • Sismono F; European Institute For ORL, GZA Sint-Augustinus, Antwerp, Belgium.
  • Vanpoucke F; Cochlear Technology Centre Belgium, Mechelen, Belgium.
  • van Dinther J; European Institute For ORL, GZA Sint-Augustinus, Antwerp, Belgium.
  • Lerut B; ENT Department, AZ Sint-Jan Bruges-Ostend, Bruges, Belgium.
  • Kuhweide R; ENT Department, AZ Sint-Jan Bruges-Ostend, Bruges, Belgium.
  • Offeciers E; European Institute For ORL, GZA Sint-Augustinus, Antwerp, Belgium.
  • Zarowski A; European Institute For ORL, GZA Sint-Augustinus, Antwerp, Belgium.
Hear Res ; 426: 108563, 2022 12.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35794046
ABSTRACT
Measurement of the complex electrical impedance of the electrode contacts can provide new insights into the factors playing a role in the preservation of residual hearing with cochlear implants (CIs). However, unraveling the contributions related to the different phenomena from impedance data necessitates more advanced measurement and analysis techniques. The present study explores a new impedance measurement option recently included into the cochlear-implant programming software and aims to contribute to a more solid basis for the clinical use of impedance measures as a biomarker for fibrous tissue formation. Twenty adult CI-recipients were followed from surgery until 1 year after implantation by means of Electrode Voltage Telemetry (EVT), also called Electric Field Imaging or TransImpedance-Matrix measurement, and a 4-point technique for probing the voltage between adjacent electrode contacts. The data were compared to the electrode location derived from computed tomography, and to the device usage log. Using our impedance model for electrical stimulation of the cochlea, the polarization impedance related the electrode-tissue interface was determined, and the bulk impedance (access resistance) was split into a near-field and a far-field component. On average, the polarization impedance increased abruptly after surgery, indicating a strong passivation of the electrode contacts before cochlear-implant initiation. Its initial rise resolved almost completely soon after device switchon (2-4 weeks). The gradual increase of the access resistance mainly happened during the first 40 days on a time scale very similar to that observed in a guinea-pig study correlating impedance changes to fibrous tissue growth. The higher increase towards the round window is consistent with the higher amount of tissue observed in histological animal studies close to the electrode entry point. While the initial changes were due to the near-field resistance, the far-field resistance began to rise only after one month for half of the study group, once the near-field component had reached its critical value. This suggests indeed fibrosis initiating near the electrode contacts and spreading thereafter farther away. The near-field resistance positively correlated to device usage. EVT data allow for a further decomposition of the impedance at a cochlear-implant electrode, yielding a more detailed description of the postoperative intracochlear phenomena, such as fibrosis.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Implantes Cocleares / Implante Coclear Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2022 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Implantes Cocleares / Implante Coclear Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2022 Tipo de documento: Article