Fine-grain recordings of the electrically evoked compound action potential amplitude growth function in cochlear implant recipients

Abstract Background In cochlear implants (CI) measuring the electrically evoked compound action potential (ECAP) has become an important tool for verifying the electrode-nerve interface as well as establishing a basis for a map to program the speech processor. In a standard clinical setup recordings...

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Main Authors: Lutz Gärtner, Thomas Lenarz, Andreas Büchner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-10-01
Series:BioMedical Engineering OnLine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12938-018-0588-z
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spelling doaj-1e3d90e2a3e34ef88133874bfa97fb702020-11-25T00:42:30ZengBMCBioMedical Engineering OnLine1475-925X2018-10-0117111310.1186/s12938-018-0588-zFine-grain recordings of the electrically evoked compound action potential amplitude growth function in cochlear implant recipientsLutz Gärtner0Thomas Lenarz1Andreas Büchner2Department of Otolaryngology, Hannover Medical SchoolDepartment of Otolaryngology, Hannover Medical SchoolDepartment of Otolaryngology, Hannover Medical SchoolAbstract Background In cochlear implants (CI) measuring the electrically evoked compound action potential (ECAP) has become an important tool for verifying the electrode-nerve interface as well as establishing a basis for a map to program the speech processor. In a standard clinical setup recordings are averaged over 25–100 repetitions to allow for the detection of ECAPs within the noise floor. To obtain an amplitude growth function, these measurements are normally performed for 5–10 different stimulation levels. We evaluate a recording paradigm where the stimulation intensity is increased in quasi-continuous steps and instead of averaging repeated recordings with identical stimulation parameters, running averages over small intervals of stimulation levels are computed. The first visible nerve response was manually identified by two experts. Results Both recording paradigms were evaluated in 39 cochlear implants, showing an on average lower threshold of the first nerve response for the quasi-continuous measurement paradigm (Wilcoxon signed-rank test, p = 6.2e−08) compared to the clinical standard paradigm. The mean maximal loudness over all implants and stimulation electrodes was 13% lower at the 80 pulses/s quasi-continuous paradigm compared to the 44 pulses/s clinical standard paradigm. Conclusions Beside a more robust determination of the ECAP threshold, the proposed quasi-continuous stimulation paradigm results in a more robust behavioral feedback of the CI user upon the maximal acceptable loudness percept. Furthermore this paradigm can also reveal the fine-structure in the amplitude growth function.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12938-018-0588-zECAPElectrically evoked compound action potentialCochlear implantAmplitude growth functionFine-grain
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lutz Gärtner
Thomas Lenarz
Andreas Büchner
spellingShingle Lutz Gärtner
Thomas Lenarz
Andreas Büchner
Fine-grain recordings of the electrically evoked compound action potential amplitude growth function in cochlear implant recipients
BioMedical Engineering OnLine
ECAP
Electrically evoked compound action potential
Cochlear implant
Amplitude growth function
Fine-grain
author_facet Lutz Gärtner
Thomas Lenarz
Andreas Büchner
author_sort Lutz Gärtner
title Fine-grain recordings of the electrically evoked compound action potential amplitude growth function in cochlear implant recipients
title_short Fine-grain recordings of the electrically evoked compound action potential amplitude growth function in cochlear implant recipients
title_full Fine-grain recordings of the electrically evoked compound action potential amplitude growth function in cochlear implant recipients
title_fullStr Fine-grain recordings of the electrically evoked compound action potential amplitude growth function in cochlear implant recipients
title_full_unstemmed Fine-grain recordings of the electrically evoked compound action potential amplitude growth function in cochlear implant recipients
title_sort fine-grain recordings of the electrically evoked compound action potential amplitude growth function in cochlear implant recipients
publisher BMC
series BioMedical Engineering OnLine
issn 1475-925X
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Abstract Background In cochlear implants (CI) measuring the electrically evoked compound action potential (ECAP) has become an important tool for verifying the electrode-nerve interface as well as establishing a basis for a map to program the speech processor. In a standard clinical setup recordings are averaged over 25–100 repetitions to allow for the detection of ECAPs within the noise floor. To obtain an amplitude growth function, these measurements are normally performed for 5–10 different stimulation levels. We evaluate a recording paradigm where the stimulation intensity is increased in quasi-continuous steps and instead of averaging repeated recordings with identical stimulation parameters, running averages over small intervals of stimulation levels are computed. The first visible nerve response was manually identified by two experts. Results Both recording paradigms were evaluated in 39 cochlear implants, showing an on average lower threshold of the first nerve response for the quasi-continuous measurement paradigm (Wilcoxon signed-rank test, p = 6.2e−08) compared to the clinical standard paradigm. The mean maximal loudness over all implants and stimulation electrodes was 13% lower at the 80 pulses/s quasi-continuous paradigm compared to the 44 pulses/s clinical standard paradigm. Conclusions Beside a more robust determination of the ECAP threshold, the proposed quasi-continuous stimulation paradigm results in a more robust behavioral feedback of the CI user upon the maximal acceptable loudness percept. Furthermore this paradigm can also reveal the fine-structure in the amplitude growth function.
topic ECAP
Electrically evoked compound action potential
Cochlear implant
Amplitude growth function
Fine-grain
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12938-018-0588-z
work_keys_str_mv AT lutzgartner finegrainrecordingsoftheelectricallyevokedcompoundactionpotentialamplitudegrowthfunctionincochlearimplantrecipients
AT thomaslenarz finegrainrecordingsoftheelectricallyevokedcompoundactionpotentialamplitudegrowthfunctionincochlearimplantrecipients
AT andreasbuchner finegrainrecordingsoftheelectricallyevokedcompoundactionpotentialamplitudegrowthfunctionincochlearimplantrecipients
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