| Literature DB >> 29203800 |
Melissa Jane Polonenko1,2, Karen Ann Gordon3,4,5,6, Sharon Lynn Cushing3,5,6, Blake Croll Papsin3,5,6.
Abstract
Early treatment of single sided deafness in children has been recommended to protect from neurodevelopmental preference for the better hearing ear and from social and educational deficits. A fairly homogeneous group of five young children (≤3.6 years of age) with normal right sided hearing who received a cochlear implant to treat deafness in their left ears were studied. Etiology of deafness was largely cytomegalovirus (n = 4); one child had an enlarged vestibular aqueduct. Multi-channel electroencephalography of cortical evoked activity was measured repeatedly over time at: 1) acute (0.5 ± 0.7 weeks); 2) early chronic (1.1 ± 0.2 months); and 3) chronic (5.8 ± 3.4 months) cochlear implant stimulation. Results indicated consistent responses from the normal right ear with marked changes in activity from the implanted left ear. Atypical distribution of peak amplitude activity from the implanted ear at acute stimulation marked abnormal lateralization of activity to the ipsilateral left auditory cortex and recruitment of extra-temporal areas including left frontal cortex. These abnormalities resolved with chronic implant use and contralateral aural preference emerged in both auditory cortices. These findings indicate that early implantation in young children with single sided deafness can rapidly restore bilateral auditory input to the cortex needed to improve binaural hearing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29203800 PMCID: PMC5715123 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-17129-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Evidence of chronic stimulation from datalogging information collected from the children’s cochlear implant processors. (a) The total average number of hours per day that each child used their cochlear implant (CI) is plotted against duration of CI experience (symbols connected with gray lines). Colours indicate the time points closest to the test time points that datalogs were collected, and the black line indicates the full linear mixed model based on n = 4 and log-transformation of CI use. (b) Average daily CI listening ± SD was predominantly at 50–69 dB A across time points. Datalogs were available for 4 children at all time points. A fifth child (S1) had one datalog at chronic stimulation (n = 5 at this time point). Data from four of the five children were also included in[36].
Figure 2Surface recordings and source locations over time of CI stimulation: acute (initial activation week), early chronic (1 month), chronic (6 months). (a) Mean (solid line) ± SD (shaded region) global field power (GFP) as a function of post-stimulus time for each ear. The cochlear implant (CI) artefact is visible during stimulation presentation (0–36 ms), which occurred at latencies earlier than peaks P1 and N2. Mean ± 1SD of P1 and N2 peaks identified from each child’s GFP are indicated by symbols and errorbars. There were no significant changes (p > 0.05) in either peak amplitudes or latencies over time. (b) Topographical distributions of mean average-referenced surface responses at these mean peak latencies of P1 and N2. Opposite frontal-posterior polarities for P1 and N2 are evident for stimuli presented to the right normal hearing ear in all three recordings. Responses from the left ear CI were reversed in polarity at the first recording but the subsequent two recordings revealed frontal-positive activity for both P1 and N2. (c) Axial views of mean source activity in each of the 63,307 3 × 3 × 3 mm voxels (higher signal-to-noise pseudo-Z ratio in red) show widespread regions of activation underlying P1 for both the implanted and normal hearing ears upon acute stimulation. Activity became localized primarily to temporal lobes with chronic CI use. Because one child (S1) had missing data for the second visit, all measures for both P1 and N2 had n = 5 for acute and chronic stimulation; n = 4 for early chronic stimulation.
Figure 3Peak dipole moments in the auditory cortices underlying P1. (a) Peak dipoles were located at similar locations for both the left implanted and right normal hearing ears over time. (b) Peak dipole moments for each ear and cortex individually varied somewhat with CI experience but there were no overall changes for right ear stimulation or left CI stimulation (p > 0.05). Symbols connected by gray lines indicate individual data, and the black line indicates the full linear mixed effects model using log-transformed CI use as a predictor. Data was missing from one child (S1) at early chronic stimulation, which had n = 4. Both acute and chronic stimulation time points had n = 5. Colours indicate test visits: acute (blue), early chronic (green), and chronic (red) CI stimulation.
Figure 4Abnormal cortical activity reverses with chronic CI stimulation. (a) Stimulation of the new left implanted ear revealed abnormal cortical lateralization (weighting) to the ipsilateral (left) cortex, which reversed towards the right cortex with chronic CI stimulation (p < 0.05). (b) Stimulation of the normal hearing ear revealed expected cortical lateralization to the contralateral left cortex in three of five children, which remained consistent with time. As a result, a distribution of expected cortical lateralization from both ears to the contralateral auditory cortex emerged after ~6 months. (c) Each cortex abnormally preferred stimulation from the ipsilateral ear in most children with acute stimulation, but tended to reverse towards preferring contralateral stimulation with CI stimulation (p < 0.05). (d) Both cortices preferred stimulation from only one ear at early time points. Distribution of preference for the expected contralateral ear emerged in both cortices by ~6 months.