MED-EL Implantate
MED-EL Implantate

Successful Results

Successful Results

Fine Structure Processing Survey

A clinical trial incorporating MED-EL’s FineHearing™ sound coding strategy demonstrated statistically significant improvements in hearing in noisy environments and in music enjoyment, two areas of hearing that have presented challenges for cochlear implant users.1




Music Appreciation in Experienced MED-EL Cochlear Implant Users Switching to the New Fine Structure Processing ™ Coding Strategy


A questionnaire of patients (n=46) who participated in the Fine Structure Processing clinical trial showed:2

91%

of the subjects reported that, in general, music sounds pleasant with their cochlear implant

82%

report listening to music every week, if not every day


65%

report improved enjoyment of familiar music, while


59%

report improved enjoyment of music that is unfamiliar


62%

report that they are better able to recognize familiar melodies


62%

report improved ability to recognize individual instruments in a known piece of music


67%

report that music sounds more natural and 64% report that it sounds fuller or more resonant




Everyday Listening Abilities in Experience
MED-EL Cochlear Implant Users Switching to the New Fine Structure Processing™ Coding Strategy


A questionnaire of patients (n=46) who participated in the Fine Structure Processing clinical trial showed:3

60% understood both male and female voices better in everyday noisy environments

More than half

reported improvement in speech understanding while listening in group situations


72%

of the group used the phone (n=33); approximately half of these patients experienced improvement while talking with familiar speakers


Half

reported improved understanding of the television


Half

reported better understanding of passengers while driving in the car




Telephone Use and Understanding
in Patients with Cochlear Implants.


A telephone use study conducted by an independent cochlear implant center indicated that the majority of MED‑EL cochlear implant users (85 percent) are able to use a standard or cellular telephone.4

 


1,2,3 Final Report: FS1 Clinical Investigation CRD2005CIP001. Data on file at MED-EL.

4 Adams JS, Hasenstab MS, Pippin GW, Sismanis A. (2004). Telephone use and understanding in patients with cochlear implants. Ear Nose Throat J.;83(2):96, 99-100, 102-3.

No one says it better than our cochlear implant users. Click here to read their stories.

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