Minimally Traumatic Cochlear Implant Surgery: Expert Opinion in 2010 and 2020.
Vedat TopsakalSumit AgrawalMarcus AtlasWolf-Dieter BaumgartnerKevin BrownIain A BruceStefan DazertRudolf HagenLuis LassalettaRobert MlynskiChristopher H RaineGunesh P RajanJoachim SchmutzhardGeorg Mathias SprinzlHinrich StaeckerShin-Ichi UsamiVincent van RompaeyMario Emilio ZernottiPaul van de HeyningPublished in: Journal of personalized medicine (2022)
This study aimed to discover expert opinion on the surgical techniques and materials most likely to achieve maximum postoperative residual hearing preservation in cochlear implant (CI) surgery and to determine how these opinions have changed since 2010. A previously published questionnaire used in a study published in 2010 was adapted and expanded. The questionnaire was distributed to an international group of experienced CI surgeons. Present results were compared, via descriptive statistics, to those from the 2010 survey. Eighteen surgeons completed the questionnaire. Respondents clearly favored the following: round window insertion, slow array insertion, and the peri- and postoperative use of systematic antibiotics. Insertion depth was regarded as important, and electrode arrays less likely to induce trauma were preferred. The usefulness of dedicated soft-surgery training was also recognized. A lack of agreement was found on whether the middle ear cavity should be flushed with a non-aminoglycoside antibiotic solution or whether a sheath or insertion tube should be used to avoid contaminating the array with blood or bone dust. In conclusion, this paper demonstrates how beliefs about CI soft surgery have changed since 2010 and shows areas of current consensus and disagreement.
Keyphrases
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery bypass
- cross sectional
- surgical site infection
- patients undergoing
- spinal cord injury
- clinical practice
- high resolution
- randomized controlled trial
- high throughput
- optical coherence tomography
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- bone mineral density
- climate change
- soft tissue
- single cell
- thoracic surgery
- atrial fibrillation
- virtual reality
- health risk assessment