Literature DB >> 22353161

Feasible pickup from intact ossicular chain with floating piezoelectric microphone.

Hou-Yong Kang1, Gao Na, Fang-Lu Chi, Kai Jin, Tie-Zheng Pan, Zhen Gao.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Many microphones have been developed to meet with the implantable requirement of totally implantable cochlear implant (TICI). However, a biocompatible one without destroying the intactness of the ossicular chain still remains under investigation. Such an implantable floating piezoelectric microphone (FPM) has been manufactured and shows an efficient electroacoustic performance in vitro test at our lab. We examined whether it pick up sensitively from the intact ossicular chain and postulated whether it be an optimal implantable one.
METHODS: Animal controlled experiment: five adult cats (eight ears) were sacrificed as the model to test the electroacoustic performance of the FPM. Three groups were studied: (1) the experiment group (on malleus): the FPM glued onto the handle of the malleus of the intact ossicular chains; (2) negative control group (in vivo): the FPM only hung into the tympanic cavity; (3) positive control group (Hy-M30): a HiFi commercial microphone placed close to the site of the experiment ear. The testing speaker played pure tones orderly ranged from 0.25 to 8.0 kHz. The FPM inside the ear and the HiFi microphone simultaneously picked up acoustic vibration which recorded as .wav files to analyze.
RESULTS: The FPM transformed acoustic vibration sensitively and flatly as did the in vitro test across the frequencies above 2.0 kHz, whereas inefficiently below 1.0 kHz for its overloading mass. Although the HiFi microphone presented more efficiently than the FPM did, there was no significant difference at 3.0 kHz and 8.0 kHz.
CONCLUSIONS: It is feasible to develop such an implantable FPM for future TICIs and TIHAs system on condition that the improvement of Micro Electromechanical System and piezoelectric ceramic material technology would be applied to reduce its weight and minimize its size.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22353161      PMCID: PMC3312860          DOI: 10.1186/1475-925X-11-10

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomed Eng Online        ISSN: 1475-925X            Impact factor:   2.819


  34 in total

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2.  Mass loading on the ossicles and middle ear function.

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4.  The effects of mass loading the ossicles with a floating mass transducer on middle ear transfer function.

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6.  Fully implantable Otologics MET Carina(™) device for the treatment of sensorineural and mixed hearing loss: Audio-otological results.

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  1 in total

Review 1.  A technical review and evaluation of implantable sensors for hearing devices.

Authors:  Diego Calero; Stephan Paul; André Gesing; Fabio Alves; Júlio A Cordioli
Journal:  Biomed Eng Online       Date:  2018-02-13       Impact factor: 2.819

  1 in total

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