"Caiden
was born, and before we left the hospital we did the newborn hearing
screening. And he had failed, so we came back a week later, did the test
again, failed again," said his mother Danielle Moran.
Caiden
was born profoundly deaf, with no cochleas -- an inner part of the ear
that converts sound to nerve impulses and sends them to the brain. At
the time doctors confirmed baby Caiden was deaf his father Tommy -- a
member of the U.S. Navy -- had been deployed away.
"I
was sad," he said. "I didn't know anybody who was deaf, I didn't know
sign language, I didn't know how to be a good dad and raise a deaf
child."
Because Caiden had no cochleas,
a cochlear implant would be of no help. Instead, his parents learned
sign language, assuming it would be the only way their son could ever
communicate.
Then, by chance, Danielle heard about a potential solution -- an auditory brainstem implant (ABI).
An
ABI consists of a microphone and transmitter on the head, which convert
sounds from the outside world into electrical signals. Those signals
are transmitted to an internal receiver made up of electrodes, implanted
on the brainstem. The auditory neurons are stimulated directly in the
brain, bypassing the inner ear completely.
Dr. Mark Krieger refers to the ABI as a "bionic ear."
"By
putting this electrode directly into the hearing centers of the brain,
it actually is taking stuff and using the brain the way it's designed to
work," said Dr. Krieger. "And the brain itself ... in a very young
child, is able to grow and develop around this implant."
Dr. Krieger is a pediatric neurosurgeon at Children's Hospital, Los Angeles. In conjunction with USC's Keck School of Medicine, a clinical trial was started in 2014 to perform auditory brainstem implants on young children.
Although
surgeons in Italy have been performing the procedure for more than 10
years, this trial is the only FDA-approved trial funded by the National
Institutes of Health in the United States, and is only available for
children aged two to five.
Caiden was chosen for the trial and in January 2015, he underwent brain surgery to implant the device.
"We
know from cochlear implant studies that the earlier the auditory system
and the brain can be stimulated, the better the children will do," said
Dr. Eric Wilkinson, one of the three surgeons who performed Caiden's
operation.
.png)
By
7:45 PM

0 comments