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HOUSE EAR INSTITUTE CELEBRATES 25 YEARS SINCE THE FIRST DEAF CHILD
RECEIVED A COCHLEAR IMPLANT
LOS ANGELES -- July 13, 2005 -- It is estimated that hearing loss occurs
in approximately 12,000 children each year. With technological
breakthroughs in auditory science like the cochlear implant, children
with severe to profound hearing loss are able to improve their abilities
to communicate and learn in a world wired for sound. July 2005 marks the
25th Anniversary of the first pediatric cochlear implantation in the
United States, a milestone for the House Ear Institute (HEI), which
received FDA approval for a clinical trial in July 1980 to implant three
patients under the age of 18 with the single-channel cochlear implant.
This single-channel device had been developed at HEI by William House,
M.D., in the 1960s and successfully implanted in adults. HEI's clinical
trial led to successful implantation of the same device in the first
pre-school-aged child the following year, to much fanfare and
controversy. Over the next 10 years, other centers in the U.S. initiated
FDA pediatric clinical trials under the guidance of the House Ear
Institute in partnership with 3M Company. Once a more sophisticated
multi-channel device gained clinical acceptance, HEI became the first
center in the U.S. to implant a young child with it, paving the way for
expanded use.
With the development of multi-channel cochlear implants, recipients have
been able to realize even greater benefits from this technology. The
multi-channel cochlear implant was FDA-approved for pediatric use in
1990. In the early 1990s, the pediatric implant program at the House Ear
Institute/House Clinic typically implanted about 12 children per year.
Today, approximately 55 children are implanted through this program
annually, and physicians of the House Clinic have trained colleagues
around the world to perform the cochlear implant surgery. The cochlear
implant has proved to be one of the most significant advances in the
treatment of deafness, and as it has continued to improve
technologically approximately 50,000 pediatric patients have received
these devices worldwide.
"Hearing is essential to spoken language development, and the earlier
hearing loss occurs in a child's life, the more serious its effects on
communication and learning," said researcher Laurie Eisenberg, Ph.D.,
House Ear Institute, who also was an audiologist on the first pediatric
cochlear implant team in 1980.
"Today, we implant children as early as 12 months, which means we can
positively affect communication at a crucial stage of development,"
continued Eisenberg.
Cochlear implants are surgically implanted electronic devices that also
include externally worn components. The implants provide sound
information for people who are unable to hear conversational-level
speech through the use of even the most powerful hearing aids. Many
patients are able to understand speech with a cochlear implant, and most
children who are appropriate candidates are able to develop functional
oral communication skills and even attend regular educational programs.
About the House Ear Institute
The House Ear Institute (HEI) is a private, non-profit 501(c)(3)
organization dedicated to advancing hearing science through research and
education to improve quality of life. HEI scientists are exploring the
causes of auditory disorders at the cellular and molecular level as well
as the complex relationship between the ear and brain, and refining the
application of auditory implants, diagnostic techniques and hearing
aids. For more information please call (213) 483-4431 or visit the Web
site at www.hei.org <http://www.hei.org>.
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