Central Auditory Nervous System Stimulation through the Cochlear Implant Use and Its Behavioral Impacts: A Longitudinal Study of Case Series
Author(s) -
Marina Isabel Cavalcanti,
Liliane Aparecida Fagundes Silva,
María Valéria Schmidt Goffi-Gómez,
Robinson Koji Tsuji,
Ricardo Ferreira Bento,
Ana Cláudia Martinho de Carvalho,
Carla Gentile Matas
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
case reports in otolaryngology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-6765
pISSN - 2090-6773
DOI - 10.1155/2021/8888450
Subject(s) - cochlear implant , audiology , latency (audio) , medicine , language development , auditory pathways , longitudinal study , developmental psychology , psychology , pathology , electrical engineering , engineering
The purpose of this study was to investigate, over a period of five years, the cortical maturation of the central auditory pathways and its impacts on the auditory and oral language development of children with effective use and without effective use of a Cochlear Implant (CI). A case series study was conducted with seven children who were CI users and seven children with normal hearing, with age- and gender-matched to CI users. The assessment was performed by long-latency auditory evoked potentials and auditory and oral language behavioral protocols. The results pronounced P1 latency decrease in all CI users in the first nine months. Over five years, five children with effective CI use presented decrease or stabilization of P1 latency and a gradual development of auditory and oral language skills, although, for most of the children, the electrophysiological and behavior results remained poor than their hearing peers' results. Two children who stopped the effective use of CI after the first year of activation had worsened auditory and oral language behavioral skills and presented increased P1 latency. A negative correlation was observed between behavioral measures and the P1 latency, the P1 component being considered an important clinical resource capable of measuring the cortical maturation and the behavioral evolution.
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