Frontiers in Psychology (Oct 2013)

Benefits and detriments of unilateral cochlear implant use on bilateral auditory development in children who are deaf

  • Karen A. Gordon,
  • Karen A. Gordon,
  • Karen A. Gordon,
  • Salima eJiwani,
  • Salima eJiwani,
  • Blake ePapsin,
  • Blake ePapsin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00719
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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We have explored both the benefits and detriments of providing electrical input through a cochlear implant in one ear to the auditory system of young children. A cochlear implant delivers electrical pulses to stimulate the auditory nerve, providing children who are deaf with access to sound. The goals of implantation are to restrict reorganization of the deprived immature auditory brain and promote development of hearing and spoken language. It is clear that limiting the duration of deprivation is a key factor. Additional considerations are the onset, etiology, and use of residual hearing as each of these can have unique effects on auditory development in the pre-implant period. New findings show that many children receiving unilateral cochlear implants are developing mature-like brainstem and thalamo-cortical responses to sound with long term use despite these sources of variability; however, there remain considerable abnormalities in cortical function. The most apparent, determined by implanting the other ear and measuring responses to acute stimulation, is a loss of normal cortical response from the deprived ear. Recent data reveal that this can be avoided in children by early implantation of both ears simultaneously or with limited delay. We conclude that auditory development requires input early in development and from both ears.

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