A follow-up study of long-term results after cochlear implantation in children and adolescents.

  • J Kiefer
  • V Gall
  • C Desloovere
  • Rainald Knecht
  • A Mikowski
  • C von Ilberg

Related Research units

Abstract

The time course of speech development in children after cochlear implantation may extend over many years, thus making long-term studies necessary to evaluate any outcome. We report our long-term results after cochlear implantation in children and adolescents. Mean follow-up was 28 months, ranging from 1 to 5 years. After at least 1 year of experience all children were found to benefit from their cochlear implants. The majority of children scored above chance in speech identification tasks requiring closed set word and sentence understanding). At the 4-year interval, all children tested including prelingually deaf children had developed open set sentence understanding. The most relevant factor accounting for differences in the results was the duration of implant use in all groups. Even beyond 3 years the results continued to improve. Peri- or postlingually deafened children tended to have favorable results. For prelingually deaf children, duration of deafness and age at implantation were correlated negatively with the results.

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number3
ISSN0937-4477
Publication statusPublished - 1996
pubmed 8652158