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Cochlear Implants - Any Experience With Them?
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:01 pm
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:01 pm
I know a person who is about to get them due to hearing loss which results from a stroke. What is the experience of the posters of the OT with them?
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:03 pm to PalletJack
Rush Limbaugh was grateful for his.
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:04 pm to PalletJack
Nephew was deaf at birth and has some. He likes to turn them off though.
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:06 pm to PalletJack
used to assist in their implantation during training.
They're great for those who 1) meet the criteria and 2) are capable/responsible enough to follow instructions on care and management of the area/device after surgery
Improvement varies in both adult and pediatric population but overall they're fantastic
Yall watch those 'baby gets implants turned on and hears parents voices for the first time' - videos? That stuff will make you choke up every time
They're great for those who 1) meet the criteria and 2) are capable/responsible enough to follow instructions on care and management of the area/device after surgery
Improvement varies in both adult and pediatric population but overall they're fantastic
Yall watch those 'baby gets implants turned on and hears parents voices for the first time' - videos? That stuff will make you choke up every time
This post was edited on 12/19/25 at 1:07 pm
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:08 pm to dyslexiateechur
quote:I have a friend like this
has some. He likes to turn them off though.
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:09 pm to PalletJack
My mother got them back in 2018. Did wonders for her and improved her quality of life tremendously. Was practically deaf before getting the surgery.
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:10 pm to SundayFunday
quote:
Yall watch those 'baby gets implants turned on and hears parents voices for the first time' - videos? That stuff will make you choke up every time
What will really choke you up is dealing with your sister in law, who watched too many of these videos, when her twins didn't react in remotely the same manner.
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:11 pm to PalletJack
The poster here Sentrious has one.
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:12 pm to PalletJack
I had a couple of kids come through Sunday school with them.
I had no idea how they worked… freaked out when one of the kids was playing and one of the gadgets “fell off”. Lady the next room over came and just plopped it back on his head- it was magnetic.
That’s all I got.
I had no idea how they worked… freaked out when one of the kids was playing and one of the gadgets “fell off”. Lady the next room over came and just plopped it back on his head- it was magnetic.
That’s all I got.
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:13 pm to PalletJack
Great for someone who has lost most or all of their hearing. You lose whatever residual hearing you have left
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:24 pm to dyslexiateechur
quote:
How did they react?
Like they were still deaf
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:40 pm to PalletJack
I have a granddaughter who was born deaf. Had cochlear implants installed before she was 2. She's now 14 and not only hears, she sings and dances in school musicals. It's a medical miracle.
Posted on 12/19/25 at 2:11 pm to PalletJack
My wife (no pics) is a speech pathologist and has worked with several kids that had them. Any specific questions you have about them?
Posted on 12/19/25 at 2:26 pm to armytiger96
They talk about spatial awareness being a little confusing due to hearing on the implant side then sound being transferred to the hearing aid side. Any info on that?
Since the cause of loss is nerve damage in the brain is there a chance it doesnt help?
Morbid said the user loses all retained hearing once installed. What does that mean, can the procedure be reversed or will the user forever be deaf if the implant is removed?
Since the cause of loss is nerve damage in the brain is there a chance it doesnt help?
Morbid said the user loses all retained hearing once installed. What does that mean, can the procedure be reversed or will the user forever be deaf if the implant is removed?
Posted on 12/19/25 at 2:27 pm to dirtsandwich
quote:
Huh?
This would be my smartass response if I wasnt the one asking. Love it
Posted on 12/19/25 at 4:28 pm to PalletJack
I am interested as well. I’ve recently had snhl hearing loss in my left ear which was my good ear. My right ear was my not so good ear. I’ve got some low frequencies back, but the highs are distorted. Had my first intratymoanic injection yesterday. Hopefully I get some more back.
This post was edited on 12/19/25 at 4:30 pm
Posted on 12/19/25 at 4:52 pm to armytiger96
quote:
Any specific questions you have about them?
Not at the moment.
Now, regarding the “no pics”…
Posted on 12/19/25 at 5:09 pm to PalletJack
quote:
Since the cause of loss is nerve damage in the brain is there a chance it doesnt help?
Cochlear implantation is a pretty in-depth process before you actually get to the surgery. Part of this is because only specific types of hearing loss and certain severity of hearing loss warrant implantation and the other factor is that insurance companies of course play God with what they allow to be covered
So while implantation has a very high success rate, failures do happen, but are usually due to procedural error, or complications after surgery.
quote:
Morbid said the user loses all retained hearing once installed. What does that mean, can the procedure be reversed or will the user forever be deaf if the implant is removed?
This is accurate. During implantation, whether it’s one ear or both ears , the cells involved in processing sound within the temporal bone are more or less permanently destroyed. So no takes backsies. So yes, whichever ear is implanted can therefore no longer function without the implant. This is another reason why screening and work up prior to surgery is so important.
Another fun fact is that if the patient has been entirely deaf since birth, and they’ve gotten to a certain age range (parentheses I can’t recall the exact average age, but usually 40s and older) the brain has never developed the Aries in the brain involving hearing in the first place, so implantation, while still being technically possible, wouldn’t provide any meaningful return of hearing. The patient literally just does not have the organized structures in their brain to process and understand sound, let alone human speech. Technically they would “hear” but that would be like a person who’s been blind since birth, and therefore never having seen anything visually suddenly having their vision granted with perfect clarity. But not only would they be entirely overwhelmed by the new sensory information but their brain would just not have context for anything they see. , it would be profoundly difficult to then form the connections in their brain to understand anything visually.
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