Hearing rehabilitation using the BAHA bone-anchored hearing aid: Results in 40 patients

Lawrence R. Lustig, H. Alexander Arts, Derald E. Brackmann, Howard F. Francis, Tim Molony, Cliff A. Megerian, Gary F. Moore, Karen M. Moore, Trish Morrow, William Potsic, Jay T. Rubenstein, Sharmilla Srireddy, Charles A. Syms, Gail Takahashi, David Vernick, Phillip A. Wackym, John K. Niparko

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

103 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: This study evaluates the U.S. experience with the first 40 patients who have undergone audiologic rehabilitation using the BAHA bone-anchored hearing aid. Study Design: This study is a multicenter, nonblinded, retrospective case series. Setting: Twelve tertiary referral medical centers in the United States. Patients: Eligibility for BAHA implantation included patients with a hearing loss and an inability to tolerate a conventional hearing aid, with bone-conduction pure tone average levels at 60 dB or less at 0.5, 1, 2, and 4 kHz. Intervention: Patients who met audiologic and clinical criteria were implanted with the Bone-Anchored Hearing Aid (BAHA, Entific Corp., Gothenburg, Sweden). Main Outcome Measures: Preoperative air- and bone-conduction thresholds and air-bone gap; postoperative BAHA-aided thresholds; hearing improvement as a result of implantation; implantation complications; and patient satisfaction. Results: The most common indications for implantation included chronic otitis media or draining ears (18 patients) and external auditory canal stenosis or aural atresia (7 patients). Overall, each patient had an average improvement of 32 ± 19 dB with the use of the BAHA. Closure of the air-bone gap to within 10 dB of the preoperative bone-conduction thresholds (postoperative BAHA-aided threshold vs. preoperative bone-conduction threshold) occurred in 32 patients (80%), whereas closure to within 5 dB occurred in 24 patients (60%). Twelve patients (30%) demonstrated 'overclosure' of the preoperative bone-conduction threshold of the better hearing ear. Complications were limited to local infection and inflammation at the implant site in three patients, and failure to osseointegrate in one patient. Patient response to the implant was uniformly satisfactory. Only one patient reported dissatisfaction with the device. Conclusions: The BAHA bone-anchored hearing aid provides a reliable and predictable adjunct for auditory rehabilitation in appropriately selected patients, offering a means of dramatically improving hearing thresholds in patients with conductive or mixed hearing loss who are otherwise unable to benefit from traditional hearing aids.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)328-334
Number of pages7
JournalOtology and Neurotology
Volume22
Issue number3
StatePublished - 2001

Keywords

  • Bone conduction
  • Conductive hearing loss
  • Congenital aural atresia
  • Hearing aid
  • Hearing implant
  • Otitis media
  • Otosclerosis
  • Skull base

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Otorhinolaryngology
  • General Neuroscience

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