We present the outcome of implantation in the first 100 adult patients trea
ted under the Midland Cochlear Implant Programme. All patients were post-li
ngually deaf with profound or total hearing loss. Performance was tested in
lip-reading, implant only and combined lip-reading and implant modes using
BKB sentences, connected discourse tracking (CDT) and environmental sound
recognition. Assessments were made at nine and 18 months post-implant.
The dominant aetiologies were idiopathic and meningitis. Meningitis was ass
ociated with the greatest numbers of ossified cochleas. Forty-three per cen
t of cases of partial ossification were identified only at surgery. Four pe
r cent of patients became non-users of their devices, however the majority
used their implants for more than 12 hours each day. The mean scores at nin
e months post-implant, in the implant only mode, were for environmental sou
nd recognition 56.7 per cent, for BKB sentences 46.6 per cent (80 per cent
of patients scored above 0 per cent) and for CDT 31.2 words per minute (w.p
.m.) (62 per cent scored above zero per cent). In the combined lip reading
and implant mode the mean scores, at nine months, were for BKB sentences 81
.5 per cent and for CDT 65.8 w.p.m. All results were sustained at 18 months
.
Patients reported that implantation significantly reduced their hearing han
dicap. Pre-operative measures of depression were also significantly reduced
at nine months post-implant. Results were sustained at 18 months.
Post-operative audiological outcomes in the electrical stimulation only mod
e correlated significantly with length of profound deafness. Results sugges
t that performance outcome is also related to the number of active electrod
es.