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I am thinking about joining a clinical study at the University of Texas Southwest Medical School. The study is on cochlear implants. They will do the implants and then conduct a study on the results. Does anyone have any input either possitive or negative concerning this procedure??

2006-11-17 06:07:39 · 4 answers · asked by bugear001 6 in Health Other - Health

4 answers

Depends on several things. Did you lose your hearing? Were you born deaf? What is your speech like today. Can people understand you?

If the study is used in conjuction with the Cohclear organization its a thumbs up. The implant runs about $80,000.00. The sucess depends on how many wires can be attached and actually hooked up to the Cohclea, They take the place of the nerves than never formed or were damaged. The new Nucleus power unit that has come out in the last couple of years, can actually be worn behind the ear now rather than on the belt with a wire running to the mic behind the ear and then to the transmitter. Everything is now up behind the ear. It also has a plug in for a Cd!! Its now all wireless! There are still units that you can get where the power unit is worn on the belt with a wire. it believe they run at a slower pace.

You must remevber that the new unit runs at about 400 times faster than the old model. It will take some getting used too. Kinda like learning a new language. You'll have to figure out what you hear and relate it to what you knew before! I believe the unit now has 22 or 23 wires that can be connected. The more that work the more you will hear. It will take about a year to get the unit tuned up after the implany

2006-11-17 06:22:48 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

My ex-boyfriends parents were deaf, and his dad was a deaf pastor. His mom had the implant and his dad didn't. She said that it was good most of the time, unless there was a high pitched noise, that would really hurt her. Of the people who went to the church about 50% had the implants, and most of them thought that they were a good thing. However, most of the people I know with them had them done when they were younger. I don't know if it affects you differently at an older age.

2006-11-17 06:11:09 · answer #2 · answered by auequine 4 · 0 0

in case you pay attention nicely with the listening to aids, needless to say you do no longer "prefer" it. From what I comprehend, deaf people do no longer even "prefer" it. it particularly is all approximately what you "prefer." there's a distinction between listening to aids and how ears often pay attention. i think of ears distinguish historic past sound extra helpful. (We overlook approximately it extra helpful, or our ears do something to alter it. i do no longer understand precisely what occurs, different than i understand older people who finally end up getting listening to aids, each so often have project with the historic past sounds sounding too loud. on the different hand, i'm on the different end of the spectrum. I pay attention great, yet historic past noises project my ears. I stay in the city, yet walk on returned streets, by way of fact the sound of site visitors bothers me. I evade college yards, by way of fact the sounds of babies stress me to distraction. My ears are extremely comfortable. in simple terms me.) It rather comes right down to, are you involved? i do no longer think of it hurts to benefit extra via asking a doctor, yet finally, and continuously, you will possibly have considered attempting. by no ability ask what different think of for something that has effects on you on my own.

2016-10-22 06:29:05 · answer #3 · answered by titman 4 · 0 0

If you are deaf then you have nothing to lose. You might hear again.

2006-11-17 06:09:31 · answer #4 · answered by tumbleweed1954 6 · 0 0

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