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Science 8 February 2002: Vol. 295. no. 5557, pp. 1025 - 1029 DOI: 10.1126/science.1067796
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Viewpoint
Sending Sound to the Brain
J. P. Rauschecker,1
R. V. Shannon2
The cochlear implant, a microelectrode array that
directly stimulates the auditory nerve, has greatly benefited many
individuals with profound deafness. Deaf patients without an intact
auditory nerve may be helped by the next generation of auditory
prostheses: surface or penetrating auditory brainstem implants that
bypass the auditory nerve and directly stimulate auditory processing centers in the brainstem.
Partial or total hearing loss has many different
causes. Defects in either the outer ear or middle ear (composed of the
tympanic membrane, ear drum, and auditory ossicles) result in a
conductive hearing loss that can usually be remedied by insertion of a
hearing aid, which amplifies sound vibrations. Profound deafness, on
the other hand, is caused by loss of the sensory
hair cells in the fluid-filled, snail-shaped inner ear, or cochlea,
that transduce sound waves into electrical impulses, which are then
transmitted to the brain (Fig. 1). Profoundly deaf
individuals who still have an intact auditory nerve have profited from
the dramatic advances made over the past 30 years in the field of
cochlear implants (CIs) (1, 2). The CI is a
microelectrode array implanted in the cochlea
that directly stimulates the auditory
nerve. With more than 40,000 patients worldwide, the success of these
devices is nothing short of miraculous: Most adults are able to
converse on the phone, and most children are able to be
educated in mainstream classrooms. For some
profoundly deaf individuals, however, even electrical stimulation of
the inner ear with a CI is impossible owing to an absence or
destruction of the auditory nerve. Instead, an auditory prosthesis
consisting of a microelectrode array that directly stimulates one of
the auditory processing centers of the brainstem, bypassing the cochlea
and auditory nerve, might restore hearing to these patients. Such
auditory brainstem implants (ABIs) have been under development since
the late 1970s, pioneered by physicians and researchers at the House
Ear Institute in Los Angeles (3), but have had only limited
success. The next step in ABI evolution is already under way: Whereas
conventional ABIs stimulate the surface of the ventral cochlear nucleus
in the brainstem, the microelectrode array in the new generation of
ABIs penetrates into the depths of the ventral cochlear nucleus,
directly stimulating its neurons (nerve cells) (Fig.
2). This new approach has become feasible owing to the
high-tech development of materials and electronics by researchers in
the field of neural prosthetics (including CIs), as well as successful
stereotactic studies carried out with permanent depth electrodes in
cats, an animal with an auditory system similar to our own
(4).
1 Department of Physiology and Biophysics,
Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC 20007, USA.
2 Department of Auditory Implants and Perception,
House Ear Institute, Los Angeles, CA 90057, USA.
Read the Full Text
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
- Spatially Distinct Functional Output Regions within the Central Nucleus of the Inferior Colliculus: Implications for an Auditory Midbrain Implant.
- H. H. Lim and D. J. Anderson (2007)
J. Neurosci.
27, 8733-8743
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- From the Cover: Evidence that cochlear-implanted deaf patients are better multisensory integrators.
- J. Rouger, S. Lagleyre, B. Fraysse, S. Deneve, O. Deguine, and P. Barone (2007)
PNAS
104, 7295-7300
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- Auditory Cortical Responses to Electrical Stimulation of the Inferior Colliculus: Implications for an Auditory Midbrain Implant.
- H. H. Lim and D. J. Anderson (2006)
J Neurophysiol
96, 975-988
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- Effects of Electrically Coupled Inhibitory Networks on Local Neuronal Responses to Intracortical Microstimulation.
- S. Butovas, S. G. Hormuzdi, H. Monyer, and C. Schwarz (2006)
J Neurophysiol
96, 1227-1236
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- Bilateral Cochlear Implants in Adults and Children.
- R. Y. Litovsky, A. Parkinson, J. Arcaroli, R. Peters, J. Lake, P. Johnstone, and G. Yu (2004)
Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg
130, 648-655
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- Localized Neurotransmitter Release for Use in a Prototype Retinal Interface.
- M. C. Peterman, D. M. Bloom, C. Lee, S. F. Bent, M. F. Marmor, M. S. Blumenkranz, and H. A. Fishman (2003)
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.
44, 3144-3149
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- Will Retinal Implants Restore Vision?.
- E. Zrenner (2002)
Science
295, 1022-1025
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E-Letters:
Read all E-Letters
- A Problem with Technology for the Deaf
- Micah Joel Ashman
- Science Online, 14 Feb 2002
[Full text]
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