4.5 Article

Summating Potential as Marker of Intracochlear Position in Bipolar Electrocochleography

Journal

EAR AND HEARING
Volume 44, Issue 1, Pages 118-134

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000001259

Keywords

Cochlear implant; Electrocochleography; Guinea pig; Hearing preservation; Summating potential

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To minimize trauma and avoid unwanted interactions of electric and acoustic stimuli, it is recommended to stop cochlear implantation before reaching the cochlear partition with residual hearing. This study investigated the use of intracochlear bipolar summating potential (SP) recordings to determine the exact cochlear position of implanted cochlear implants (CIs) in guinea pigs. The results showed that SP recordings provide reliable information on electrode position in the cochlea, which remains reliable even after moderate hearing loss.
Objectives: Cochlear implantation criteria include subjects with residual low-frequency hearing. To minimize implantation trauma and to avoid unwanted interactions of electric- and acoustic stimuli, it is often recommended to stop cochlear implantation before the cochlear implant (CI) reaches the cochlear partition with residual hearing, as determined by an audiogram. For this purpose, the implant can be used to record acoustically evoked signals during implantation, including cochlear compound action potentials (CAP), cochlear microphonics (CMs), and summating potentials (SPs). The former two have previously been used to monitor residual hearing in clinical settings. Design: In the present study we investigated the use of intracochlear, bipolar SP recordings to determine the exact cochlear position of the contacts of implanted CIs in guinea pig cochleae (n = 13). Polarity reversals of SPs were used as a functional marker of intracochlear position. Micro computed tomography (mu CT) imaging and a modified Greenwood function were used to determine the cochleotopic positions of the contacts in the cochlea. These anatomical reconstructions were used to validate the SP-based position estimates. Results: The precision of the SP-based position estimation was on average within +/- 0.37 octaves and was not impaired by moderate hearing loss caused by noise exposure after implantation. It is important to note that acute hearing impairment did not reduce the precision of the method. The cochleotopic position of CI accounted for similar to 70% of the variability of SP polarity reversals. Outliers in the dataset were associated with lateral CI positions. Last, we propose a simplified method to avoid implantation in functioning parts of the cochlea by approaching a predefined frequency region using bipolar SP recordings through a CI. Conclusions: Bipolar SP recordings provide reliable information on electrode position in the cochlea. The position estimate remains reliable after moderate hearing loss. The technique presented here could be applied during CI surgery to monitor the CI approach to a predefined frequency region.

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