Publisher’s permission requested and denied.A major factor associated with recent improvements in the clinical performance of cochlear implant patients has been the development of speech-processing strategies based on high stimulation rates. While these processing strategies show clear clinical advantage, we know little of their long-term safety implications. The present study was designed to evaluate the physiological and histopathological effects of long-term intracochlear electrical stimulation using these high rates. Thirteen normal-hearing adult cats were bilaterally implanted with scala tympani electrode arrays and unilaterally stimulated for periods of up to 2100 h using either two pairs of bipolar or three monopolar stimulating elec...
One requirement for the success of a cochlear hearing prosthesis is that long-term electrical stimul...
Increasing numbers of cochlear implant subjects have some level of residual hearing at the time of i...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology ...
Previous research has shown that chronic electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve using charge b...
Abstract of Poster 137This is an abstract of a poster presentation from the Proceedings of the Austr...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.This study was designed to evaluate the pathophysiologic...
Publisher's permission requested and denied.The present study examines the effects of long-term elec...
© 1986 Dr. Robert Keith ShepherdThe present research used both physiological and histological techni...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.To examine the safety of auditory brainstem prosthesis, ...
Speech processing strategies based on high rate electrical stimulation have been associated with imp...
This is an abstract of a paper presented at the 16th Annual Australian Neuroscience Meeting, Adelaid...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.The ability of spiral ganglion cells to survive long-ter...
Speech processing strategies based on high rate electrical stimulation have been associated with imp...
Multichannel cochlear prostheses selectively stimulate discrete populations of residual auditory ner...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.While recent studies have suggested that electrical stim...
One requirement for the success of a cochlear hearing prosthesis is that long-term electrical stimul...
Increasing numbers of cochlear implant subjects have some level of residual hearing at the time of i...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology ...
Previous research has shown that chronic electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve using charge b...
Abstract of Poster 137This is an abstract of a poster presentation from the Proceedings of the Austr...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.This study was designed to evaluate the pathophysiologic...
Publisher's permission requested and denied.The present study examines the effects of long-term elec...
© 1986 Dr. Robert Keith ShepherdThe present research used both physiological and histological techni...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.To examine the safety of auditory brainstem prosthesis, ...
Speech processing strategies based on high rate electrical stimulation have been associated with imp...
This is an abstract of a paper presented at the 16th Annual Australian Neuroscience Meeting, Adelaid...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.The ability of spiral ganglion cells to survive long-ter...
Speech processing strategies based on high rate electrical stimulation have been associated with imp...
Multichannel cochlear prostheses selectively stimulate discrete populations of residual auditory ner...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.While recent studies have suggested that electrical stim...
One requirement for the success of a cochlear hearing prosthesis is that long-term electrical stimul...
Increasing numbers of cochlear implant subjects have some level of residual hearing at the time of i...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology ...