982 resultados para COCHLEAR IMPLANT
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This study provides detailed information on the ability of healthy ears to generate distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs).
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This paper discusses whether the use of tympanometry and current normative values are applicable in assessing middle ear status in children with cochlear implants.
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This paper studies the effectiveness of the recorded books and teaching method developed by Dr. Marie Carbo in the aural habilitation of pre-lingual deaf children with cochlear implants.
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This paper discusses the development of a guidebook for parents and teachers of children with cochlear implants.
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This study assesses communication breakdowns in children with cochlear implants from oral and total communications backgrounds. More communication breakdowns occurred between the total communication child and the conversational partner than the oral communication child and the conversational partner. Both total and oral communication children used non-specific repair strategies.
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This paper studies and compares age related hearing loss and noise-induced hearing loss in mice, and the different cell types that are affected by aging and noise.
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This paper is a review of the electrophysiology of the cochlea and the auditory nerve--the behavior of the acting potential, the cochlear microphonics and the summating potential under identical conditions.
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This paper examines the benefit of relatively immediate cochlear implantation in post-lingually deafened preschool children as compared with initiation and continuation of intervention with traditional hearing aids.
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Imbalance is a risk of cochlear implantation. This is particularly important in patients receiving bilateral implants, who are often children. 25 adult and pediatric patients undergoing cochlear implantation were tested pre-operatively and post-operatively using tests of balance function. Results showed moderate losses in some test paradigms following implantation in the patient group as a whole. While changes in balance function due to cochlear implantation are not uncommon, their practical effect on function may be minor.
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Experiments explored the minimal kanamycin dosing regimen that renders protection against noise induced hearing loss in young CBA/J mice. We also tested the age-dependence of protection in CBA/J as well as the dependence of protection on a particular genetic background in experiments using young C57BL/6J and CBA/CaJ mice.
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Experiments evaluated both noise vulnerability and the extent of protection from noise by sub-chronic low-dose kanamycin in young F1 hybrids resulting from a cross between C57BL/6J and CBA/J inbred mice.
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Experiments evaluated cochlear expression of key stress proteins in kanamycin and saline treated C57BL/6J and CBA/J mice using immunocytochemistry. A qualitative approach was used to assess immunoreactivity for HSP70, HSF-1, HO-1, and TNF-α as a function of strain and treatment.
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Spontaneous writing samples of deaf children with cochlear implants were analyzed for syntactic errors and other descriptive characteristics. These results were compared to a small sample of writings from hearing children.
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This study investigates whether deaf children with cochlear implants have oral reading fluency scores comparable to reading-age matched hearing peers. It also examines the reading comprehension skills of deaf children with cochlear implants.