Guest guest Posted November 16, 2004 Report Share Posted November 16, 2004 -- sorry to hear about the ossification. I wish I knew more about the double array! I do know that some surgeons can skillfully get around ossification with regular implants, but I suppose that depends on the extent of it. Did you ask the same question on cicircle? Robin -- Was it a garden variety audiologist who told you this (see below) or an implant center? If it was garden variety, while what she or he said may have been true a few years ago, it isn't necessarily true today. Implant candidacy criteria are constantly changing and becoming more inclusive because of the good results seen with implants. (With an implant, my son's aided audiogram is 20 dB pretty much straight across, with some random frequencies at 25 dB and others, including 6000 Hz, at 15 dB.) It might be worth it for you to talk with an implant center, if that isn't where they told you about her non-candidacy. In my experience, non-implant audiologists are not always up on the latest when it comes to cochlear implants and who is or is not a candidate. Our hearing aid earmold audiologist has asked me some very odd questions about 's CI processor, making it clear to me that she is very poorly educated about implants in general -- like she thought that switching from a body-worn processor to a BTE required surgery! (And she is young and recently educated, too!) Lydia , almost 8, deaf with CI Colin, almost 11, hearing > , > > I'm sorry that I don't know enough about implants to answer your question about the double array. But when reading your post, Peyton's audiogram numbers stood out to me. My daugther's is very similar. 80-85db unaided after a recent drop (she dropped last year too) and 25-45 db aided. When I asked about the possibility of an implant, her audi said that they would never put an implant in her with getting such good results from her aids. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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