Brain Sciences (May 2021)

White Matter Lesions as Possible Predictors of Audiological Performance in Adults after Cochlear Implantation

  • Steffen Knopke,
  • Hans-Christian Bauknecht,
  • Stefan Gräbel,
  • Sophia Marie Häußler,
  • Agnieszka J. Szczepek,
  • Heidi Olze

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11050600
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 600

Abstract

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The presented prospective study investigated whether structural brain damage, measured with the Fazekas score, could predict hearing rehabilitation outcomes with cochlear implantation (CI). With a follow-up period of 24 months, this study included 49 bilaterally, postlingually hearing impaired CI candidates for unilateral CI (67.3 ± 8.7 years; 20 men, 29 women) older than 50 at the time of implantation. The differences in the predictive value between two age groups, 50–70 year-olds (mid-age; n = 26) and over 70-year-olds (elderly; n = 23), were analyzed. The patients were evaluated using speech perception (SP) measured in quiet (Freiburg monosyllabic test; FMT) and noise (Oldenburg sentence test; OLSA). The subjective hearing ability was assessed using Oldenburg inventory (OI). The Fazekas PVWM score predicted postoperative speech perception two years after CI in the mid-age population. The periventricular white matter lesions (PVWM) could explain 27.4% of the speech perception (FMT) variance. Our findings support the hypothesis about the influence of pre-existing WMLs on CI outcome. We recommend the evaluation of Fazekas score as a predictive factor for post-implantation hearing ability.

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