Guest guest Posted August 31, 2004 Report Share Posted August 31, 2004 This is something I would like to know, too! I am a new member of this group, and this is my first post. I do not have a CI; I am just starting to think about getting one. From age 2 to age 6, I had numerous ear infections, always in my right ear. Then at age 6, I had measles with a very high fever. That was when my parents realized that I had a hearing loss. An audiogram showed that I had essentially no hearing in my right ear. My hearing in my left ear was normal, though. However, at age 40, I began losing my hearing in my left ear, and it is now a profound loss. I wear an Oticon Supero digital aid on my left ear, but it no longer helps me very much. If I am implanted, it will be my left ear, of course. An ear (my right ear) that has not heard anything for 53 years (I'm 59 years old) is not going to benefit from a CI. Has anyone had an implant in an ear that has been essentially " dead " for that long????? in Louisville KY how long betwqeen deafness and implant? Hi all, I'd like to ask what is the longest period of non-hearing anyone has had before being implanted? I started to go deaf at about 9 years of age, stapedectomies in both ears at age 11 and 12 seemed to help, but within a few years I was pretty dependant on a HA in my right ear, which was the better of the two. Some time between late teens and 30's I lost all hearing in the left ear, and the right got worse as well. Now at age 51 I'm totally dependednt on a high power Senco aid, and was notified this week that my CI will take place mid November. The CI is going to be in the right ear, the surgeon says that after having no hearing input from the left side for such a long time, implanting the left side would have more chance of failure. Has anyone had a successful CI into an ear that has been out of action for 20 odd years? Thanks New Zealand (Middle Earth) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 31, 2004 Report Share Posted August 31, 2004 For both of you - my left hear was implanted in 1999. I do not remember when I heard anything usable in that ear. I can only remember that I would always sleep on my right side so that I didn't hear my parents snore. I've just rounded it off to being 40 years but it could be more than that. Saying any more than this would tell you exactly how old I am now. <g> We have some members of CI Hear who are hearing after being deaf all their lives so if the doctor says you are medically sound for the implant, I would not worry about the length of time the ear has been without usable sound. These devices are amazing. Your doctor is the best person to give you information like this but many doctors are very conservative with expectations. Lee might post the link to her survey which was an excellent example of the number of years some ci users on this list had gone without sound before they had their implants. Good luck to both of you. I'm glad you are here and know you will learn a great deal from the members. This is wonderful and supportive group that will help you all the way thru this venture you are learning about and probably considering. Alice This is something I would like to know, too! I am a new member of this group, and this is my first post. I do not have a CI; I am just starting to think about getting one. From age 2 to age 6, I had numerous ear infections, always in my right ear. Then at age 6, I had measles with a very high fever. That was when my parents realized that I had a hearing loss. An audiogram showed that I had essentially no hearing in my right ear. My hearing in my left ear was normal, though. However, at age 40, I began losing my hearing in my left ear, and it is now a profound loss. I wear an Oticon Supero digital aid on my left ear, but it no longer helps me very much. If I am implanted, it will be my left ear, of course. An ear (my right ear) that has not heard anything for 53 years (I'm 59 years old) is not going to benefit from a CI. Has anyone had an implant in an ear that has been essentially " dead " for that long????? in Louisville KY Hi all, I'd like to ask what is the longest period of non-hearing anyone has had before being implanted? Thanks New Zealand (Middle Earth) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 31, 2004 Report Share Posted August 31, 2004 > Hi all, > I'd like to ask what is the longest period of non-hearing anyone has > had before being implanted? I'm curious about this as well. I lost my hearing at age 4 as a result of spinal meningitis, and had my right ear implanted with a 3M single-channel device a couple of months before my 20th birthday. I haven't used it too much as it doesn't really provide a great deal of benefit, although I'm currently trying out a new AllHear processor on it until Sept. 14. Now I'm 39 and in the process of getting insurance approval for a new implant in my left ear. The doctor and audies seem to think that I likely won't get much more benefit from a new implant than my current one provides due to the length of time (35 years) I've been deaf in that ear, but I'm still willing to give it a shot and see what happens. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2004 Report Share Posted September 1, 2004 , You could say that I've been successful with my CI despite profound deafness since age 5 (still had some hearing after meningitis at 18 months but the bone growth was still going on until age 5). Hearing aids did not help at all. To my surprise, hearing with the CI is like hearing different notes from the piano instead of flat noise (one sound that repeats perpetually) with my analog hearing aids. Liesl In a message dated 8/31/04 2:27:30 PM Pacific Daylight Time, pljones@... writes: << Has anyone had a successful CI into an ear that has been out of action for 20 odd years? >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2004 Report Share Posted September 1, 2004 Hi , My sister was totally deaf for over 30 years. Her hearing loss began in early childhood so by the time she was out of high school, her hearing was gone. She was implanted at 48 yrs old and does wonderfully with her implant, even talking on the phone. It did take her a while to sort all the sounds, but being implanted in a totally useless ear after 30 yrs of deafness, she does just great. I don't think having a dead ear for so many years is a big factor.. If I was in your situation, I'd definitely give it a shot. Wishing you all the best. Regards, Silly MI In , " Showalter " <bshowalter@s...> wrote: > > I'm curious about this as well. I lost my hearing at age 4 as a > result of spinal meningitis, and had my right ear implanted with a 3M > single-channel device a couple of months before my 20th birthday. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.