OBJECTIVES: To determine the benefit of a routine plain radiography (X-ray) for confirming the optimal electrode position in cochlear implant surgery. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In total, 245 patients (135 males and 111 females) who underwent cochlear implantation in a single tertiary referral center were included in this study. Postoperative plain X-ray findings and electrophysiological tests were retrospectively analyzed. RESULTS: The mean age was 11.4±14.6 years (range, 1-70 years). Overall, 196 (80%) patients were pediatric patients (age, <18 years) and 49 (20%) were adults (age, >18 years). The mean rotation of electrode arrays was 1.03±0.17 turns. The plain X-ray revealed that electrode misplacement was present in 5 patients (2%); incomplete insertion in 3 patients, and tip rollover and electrode migration in 1 patient each. A revision was performed for the last patient who had an extracochlear electrode position in the plain X-ray. CONCLUSIONS: Postoperative imaging is mostly used to confirm the electrode array position after cochlear implant surgery. In addition, intraoperative evaluations have low positive predictive value and sensitivity. Thus, this study revealed that postoperative radiological imaging should be considered even when all intraoperative electrophysiological measures and surgical reports are normal.
OBJECTIVES: To determine the benefit of a routine plain radiography (X-ray) for confirming the optimal electrode position in cochlear implant surgery. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In total, 245 patients (135 males and 111 females) who underwent cochlear implantation in a single tertiary referral center were included in this study. Postoperative plain X-ray findings and electrophysiological tests were retrospectively analyzed. RESULTS: The mean age was 11.4±14.6 years (range, 1-70 years). Overall, 196 (80%) patients were pediatric patients (age, <18 years) and 49 (20%) were adults (age, >18 years). The mean rotation of electrode arrays was 1.03±0.17 turns. The plain X-ray revealed that electrode misplacement was present in 5 patients (2%); incomplete insertion in 3 patients, and tip rollover and electrode migration in 1 patient each. A revision was performed for the last patient who had an extracochlear electrode position in the plain X-ray. CONCLUSIONS: Postoperative imaging is mostly used to confirm the electrode array position after cochlear implant surgery. In addition, intraoperative evaluations have low positive predictive value and sensitivity. Thus, this study revealed that postoperative radiological imaging should be considered even when all intraoperative electrophysiological measures and surgical reports are normal.
Authors: Paul Van de Heyning; Peter Roland; Luis Lassaletta; Sumit Agrawal; Marcus Atlas; Wolf-Dieter Baumgartner; Kevin Brown; Marco Caversaccio; Stefan Dazert; Wolfgang Gstoettner; Rudolf Hagen; Abdulrahman Hagr; Greg Eigner Jablonski; Mohan Kameswaran; Vladislav Kuzovkov; Martin Leinung; Yongxin Li; Andreas Loth; Astrid Magele; Robert Mlynski; Joachim Mueller; Lorne Parnes; Andreas Radeloff; Chris Raine; Gunesh Rajan; Joachim Schmutzhard; Henryk Skarzynski; Piotr H Skarzynski; Georg Sprinzl; Hinrich Staecker; Timo Stöver; Dayse Tavora-Viera; Vedat Topsakal; Shin-Ichi Usami; Vincent Van Rompaey; Nora M Weiss; Wilhelm Wimmer; Mario Zernotti; Javier Gavilan Journal: Front Surg Date: 2022-03-24