476 results on '"Hey, M."'
Search Results
202. THE CURATOR'S DILEMMA
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Hey, M. H., primary
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- 1969
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203. Arthurite, a new copper—iron arsenate from Cornwall
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Davis, R. J., primary and Hey, M. H., additional
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- 1964
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204. Identification of a Calculus from a Hippopotamus
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BANNISTER, F. A., primary, HEY, M. H., additional, and OAKLEY, K. P., additional
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- 1947
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205. ChemInform Abstract: UNTERSUCHUNG DER PROTOLYSEKINETIK EINIGER AMINOSAEUREN MITTELS NMR-SPIN-ECHO-TECHNIK
- Author
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ELEY, D. D., primary, FAWCETT, A. S., additional, and HEY, M. J., additional
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- 1973
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206. The identity of erionite and offretite
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Hey, M. H., primary and Fejer, E. E., additional
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- 1962
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207. G. W. Gray. Molecular structure and the properties of liquid crystals. London and New York (Academic Press) 1962. vii + 314 pp. Price 63s.
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Hey, M. H., primary
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- 1963
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208. Minyulite (hydrous K-Al fluophosphate) from South Australia
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Spencer, L. J., primary, Bannister, F. A., additional, Hey, M. H., additional, and Bennett, Hilda, additional
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- 1943
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209. The oxyapatite (voelckerite) problem
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McConnell, Duncan, primary and Hey, M. H., additional
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- 1969
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210. Dalyite, a new potassium zirconium silicate, from Ascension Island, Atlantic
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Van Tassel, R., primary and Hey, M. H., additional
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- 1952
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211. Some products formed from phenolic inhibitors during the autoxidation of cumene. Part II
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Hey, M. E., primary and Waters, William A., additional
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- 1955
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212. A re-examination of tobermorite
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Claringbull, G. F., primary and Hey, M. H., additional
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- 1952
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213. Noise reduction algorithm spatialNR -- Audiometric test results.
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Hey, M., Hessel, H., Böhnke, B., and Mauger, S.
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NOISE control , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *ALGORITHMS , *IMPEDANCE audiometry - Abstract
Objectives: A novel noise reduction algorithms was assessed. The SpatialNR algorithm aims to separate noise from speech due to additional use of microphone directionality. This study is going to analyze the effectiveness of the method for noise reduction. Speech comprehension tests in quiet and in noise were performed. The following hypotheses were tested: a) SpatialNR shows comparable speech comprehension in stationary and in babble noise for S0N0; b) SpatialNR shows improved speech comprehension in spatially-separated noise. Material and Methods: Noise reduction method was compared in CI users concerning speech intelligibility in quiet for monosyllabic words at different intensities and for sentences in noise for various acoustic conditions (stationary and modulated noise; different noise source positions). Standard SmartSound options serves as a baseline condition for speech comprehension. 18 CI patients wearing a CI sound processor (Cochlear Limited) took part in the investigations. All patients showed postlingual onset of profound sensorineural hearing loss. Intra-individual comparisons were performed. Examination of individual differences in speech comprehension were measured after 2-3 weeks adaptation. Results: Improved speech comprehension is found for SpatialNR with S0N0 testing. There is a tendency of improved speech comprehension using SpatialNR in fluctuating noise (S0N0). Best speech comprehension was found for separated noise sources when using SpatialNR in fluctuating noise. Conclusion: SpatialNR showed improved speech comprehension in different tested conditions. This shows potential to improve speech comprehension for specific listening situations by offering specific SmartSound options. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
214. Retrospective hearing performance outcome in a larger cohort of CI532 recipients.
- Author
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Hey, M., Hoppe, U., Stoever, T., Baumann, U., and Mewes, A.
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COCHLEAR implants , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *COMMERCIAL product evaluation , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *EQUIPMENT & supplies - Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this study was to retrospectively assess hearing performance and electrophysiological characteristics based on routine audiological measures for the Nucleus® CI532 cochlear implant with Slim Modiolar electrode. Changes from pre- to post-CI treatment for a planned number of 150 patients with a CI532 in a German speaking cohort will be demonstrated. Finally benchmark data shall be established. Materials and Methods: This retrospective multi-centric study has been established to systematically assess speech understanding in quiet and in noise, unaided and aided thresholds. In addition medical history and recipient's electrode-specific objective and subjective measures (impedances, T-NRT, T- & C-Levels) and data logging will be evaluated. Data will be acquired pre-operatively as well as 3 and 6 months post-operatively in adult CI532 recipients. Results: CI aided speech understanding in quiet and in noise at 6 months post activation improved over pre-operative baseline data. The proportion of the recipient's cohort examined showing post-operative improvement for test and listening condition is ≥ 80% for the 6 months postoperative visit. The mean T-NRT profile shows increased threshold levels towards the basal part of the cochlea. Conclusion: The outcome presents sufficient evidence to show the effectiveness of the CI532. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
215. Audiometrsiche Kenndaten eines geschlossenen Logatamtests Diskriminationsfunktion und Reproduzierbarkeit.
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Hörmann, Lisa, Hey, M., and Ambrosch, Petra
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SPEECH audiometry , *STATISTICAL reliability ,RESEARCH evaluation - Published
- 2017
216. B020 Successful cochlear implantation and treatment in a patient suffering from VACTERL/VATER association
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Brademann, G., Hey, M., and Müller-Deile, J.
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- 2011
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217. Fitting ν Linear Relations to n Variables all liable to Error.
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HEY, M. H. and HEY, E. N.
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- 1960
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218. Nicolaus Steno.
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HEY, M. H.
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- 1958
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219. The formation and growth of carbon dioxide gas bubbles from supersaturated aqueous solutions
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Hey, M. J., Hilton, A. M., and Bee, R. D.
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- 1994
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220. [Book Reviews]
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HEY, M. H.
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- 1957
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221. Neglect-like symptoms in complex regional pain syndrome: learned nonuse by another name?
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Punt TD, Cooper L, Hey M, Johnson MI, Punt, David T, Cooper, Laura, Hey, Martin, and Johnson, Mark I
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- 2013
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222. [Book Reviews].
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HEY, M. H.
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- 1954
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223. C065 Speech intelligibility of Nucleus CI24 patients following upgrade to CP810 sound processor
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Müller-Deile, J., Brademann, G., and Hey, M.
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- 2011
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224. Using quality improvement tools in the investigation of prolonged turn around time and improving the efficiency in the core laboratory.
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Lee, E., Omar, A., Luceri, M., Hey, M., Chey, W.W., and Wong, M.S.
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BLOOD banks , *ROOT cause analysis - Published
- 2019
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225. Muscle weakness post-COVID: a practical guide for primary care.
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Payne R, Pring T, Hey M, Payne G, and Greenhalgh T
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- 2024
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226. Adverse perinatal outcomes associated with different classes of antiretroviral drugs in pregnant women living with HIV: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Hey M, Thompson L, Portwood C, Sexton H, Kumarendran M, Brandon Z, Kirtley S, and Hemelaar J
- Abstract
Objective: Women living with HIV (WLHIV) are at increased risk of adverse perinatal outcomes compared to HIV-negative women, despite antiretroviral therapy (ART). There is evidence that the risk of adverse perinatal outcomes may differ according to ART regimen. We aimed to assess the risk of adverse perinatal outcomes among WLHIV receiving different classes of ART, compared to HIV-negative women., Design: Systematic review and meta-analysis., Methods: We searched Medline, CINAHL, Global Health and EMBASE for studies published between 1 January 1980 and 14 July 2023. We included studies which assessed the risk of 11 predefined adverse perinatal outcomes among WLHIV receiving non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI)-based ART, protease inhibitor (PI)-based ART or integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI)-based ART, compared to HIV-negative women. The perinatal outcomes assessed were preterm birth (PTB), very PTB (VPTB), spontaneous PTB (sPTB), low birthweight (LBW), very LBW (VLBW), term LBW, preterm LBW, small for gestational age (SGA), very SGA (VSGA), stillbirth and neonatal death (NND). Random effects meta-analyses examined the risk of each adverse outcome in WLHIV receiving either NNRTI-based, PI-based or INSTI-based ART, compared with HIV-negative women. Subgroup and sensitivity analyses were conducted based on country income status, study quality, and timing of ART initiation. The protocol is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42021248987., Results: Of 108,720 identified citations, 22 cohort studies including 191,857 women were eligible for analysis. We found that WLHIV receiving NNRTI-based ART (mainly efavirenz or nevirapine) are at increased risk of PTB (risk ratio (RR) 1.40, 95% confidence interval 1.27-1.56), VPTB (1.94, 1.25-3.01), LBW (1.63, 1.30-2.04), SGA (1.53, 1.17-1.99) and VSGA (1.48, 1.16-1.87), compared with HIV-negative women. WLHIV receiving PI-based ART (mainly lopinavir/ritonavir or unspecified) are at increased risk of PTB (1.88, 1.55-2.28), VPTB (2.06, 1.01-4.18), sPTB (16.96, 1.01-284.08), LBW (2.90, 2.41-3.50), VLBW (4.35, 2.67-7.09) and VSGA (2.37, 1.84-3.05), compared with HIV-negative women. WLHIV receiving INSTI-based ART (mainly dolutegravir) are at increased risk of PTB (1.17, 1.06-1.30) and SGA (1.20, 1.08-1.33), compared with HIV-negative women., Conclusions: The risks of adverse perinatal outcomes are higher among WLHIV receiving ART compared with HIV-negative women, irrespective of the class of ART drugs. This underlines the need to further optimise ART in pregnancy and improve perinatal outcomes of WLHIV., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
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- 2024
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227. Media depictions of primary care teleconsultation safety: a thematic analysis of UK newspapers.
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Song K, Hey M, and Payne R
- Subjects
- Humans, United Kingdom, SARS-CoV-2, Remote Consultation, Newspapers as Topic, Primary Health Care, Patient Safety, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated the widespread roll-out of teleconsultations across primary care services in the UK. The media's depiction of remote consultations, especially regarding their safety, is not well established. These insights are important: newspapers' coverage of healthcare-related news can influence public perception, national policy, and clinicians' job satisfaction., Aim: To explore how the national newspapers in the UK depicted both the direct and indirect consequences of the remote-first approach on patient safety., Design and Setting: We performed thematic analysis of newspaper articles that discussed patient safety in primary care teleconsultations, which were published between 21 January 2021 and 22 April 2022., Method: We identified relevant articles using the LexisNexis Academic UK database. We categorised data from these articles into codes before developing these into emergent themes through an iterative process., Results: Across the 57 articles identified, the main safety concern identified was missed and/or delayed diagnoses over tele-appointment(s), while isolated cases of inappropriate prescribing were also reported. The media reported that the transition to a remote-first approach reduced the accessibility to primary care appointments for some groups (especially patients with lower digital literacy or access) and heightened the burden on other healthcare services; in particular, there were reports of patient care being compromised across NHS emergency departments., Conclusion: The print media predominantly reported negative impacts of remote consultations on patient safety, particularly involving missed and/ or delayed diagnoses. Our work highlights the importance of further exploration into the safety of remote consultations, and the impact of erroneous media reporting on policies and policymakers., (© The Authors.)
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- 2024
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228. Curvature analysis of CI electrode arrays: a novel approach to categorize perimodiolar positions without anatomical landmarks.
- Author
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Mewes A, Dambon J, Brademann G, and Hey M
- Abstract
Purpose: Perimodiolar electrode arrays may be positioned regular, over-inserted or under-inserted into the cochlea depending on the cochlear size and shape. The study aimed to examine whether there are differences between these groups in the local curvature along the intracochlear array. Individual curvature variables were developed to categorize the groups and the relationship between the curvature and the angular insertion depth at the electrode tip was analyzed., Methods: The curvature along the intracochlear array was measured in the CBCT image of 85 perimodiolar electrodes of a single type. The mean curvature and the ratio of the mean curvature at contacts E14-16 to the mean curvature at E7-8 (bowing ratio) were calculated across the array, and its true positive rate (TPR) and false positive rate (FPR) were calculated to establish optimal threshold values to categorize the groups., Results: 68.2% of the cases were categorized as regular positioned, 22.4% had an over-insertion and 9.4% had an under-insertion. The mean curvature was significantly weaker with under-insertion (< 342°) than with normal insertion depth (≥ 342°). With an over-insertion, the bowing ratio was < 1 and otherwise > 1. Both the mean curvature and bowing ratio were found to have an optimal threshold value with high TPR (= 1.00) and low FPR (≤ 0.06) for categorizing under-insertion and over-insertion, respectively., Conclusion: Curvature analysis is a useful tool to assess if a perimodiolar electrode array has been inserted deep enough into the cochlea. Independent of critical anatomical landmarks, over-inserted arrays and under-inserted arrays could be well categorized by using individual curvature variables. The results need to be validated using additional data sets., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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229. Factors to Describe the Outcome Characteristics of a CI Recipient.
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Hey M, Kogel K, Dambon J, Mewes A, Jürgens T, and Hocke T
- Abstract
Background: In cochlear implant (CI) treatment, there is a large variability in outcome. The aim of our study was to identify the independent audiometric measures that are most directly relevant for describing this variability in outcome characteristics of CI recipients. An extended audiometric test battery was used with selected adult patients in order to characterize the full range of CI outcomes. Methods : CI users were recruited for this study on the basis of their postoperative results and divided into three groups: low (1st quartile), moderate (medium decentile), and high hearing performance (4th quartile). Speech recognition was measured in quiet by using (i) monosyllabic words (40-80 dB SPL), (ii) speech reception threshold (SRT) for numbers, and (iii) the German matrix test in noise. In order to reconstruct demanding everyday listening situations in the clinic, the temporal characteristics of the background noise and the spatial arrangements of the signal sources were varied for tests in noise. In addition, a survey was conducted using the Speech, Spatial, and Qualities (SSQ) questionnaire and the Listening Effort (LE) questionnaire. Results : Fifteen subjects per group were examined (total N = 45), who did not differ significantly in terms of age, time after CI surgery, or CI use behavior. The groups differed mainly in the results of speech audiometry. For speech recognition, significant differences were found between the three groups for the monosyllabic tests in quiet and for the sentences in stationary (S0°N0°) and fluctuating (S0°NCI) noise. Word comprehension and sentence comprehension in quiet were both strongly correlated with the SRT in noise. This observation was also confirmed by a factor analysis. No significant differences were found between the three groups for the SSQ questionnaire and the LE questionnaire results. The results of the factor analysis indicate that speech recognition in noise provides information highly comparable to information from speech intelligibility in quiet. Conclusions : The factor analysis highlighted three components describing the postoperative outcome of CI patients. These were (i) the audiometrically measured supra-threshold speech recognition and (ii) near-threshold audibility, as well as (iii) the subjective assessment of the relationship to real life as determined by the questionnaires. These parameters appear well suited to setting up a framework for a test battery to assess CI outcomes.
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- 2024
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230. [Speech discrimination with separated signal sources and sound localization with speech stimuli : Learning effects and reproducibility].
- Author
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Buth S, Baljić I, Mewes A, and Hey M
- Subjects
- Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Female, Adult, Male, Young Adult, Sensitivity and Specificity, Speech Reception Threshold Test methods, Acoustic Stimulation methods, Speech Discrimination Tests methods, Sound Localization physiology, Speech Perception physiology, Noise
- Abstract
Background: Binaural hearing enables better speech comprehension in noisy environments and is necessary for acoustic spatial orientation. This study investigates speech discrimination in noise with separated signal sources and measures sound localization. The aim was to study characteristics and reproducibility of two selected measurement techniques which seem to be suitable for description of the aforementioned aspects of binaural hearing., Materials and Methods: Speech reception thresholds (SRT) in noise and test-retest reliability were collected from 55 normal-hearing adults for a spatial setup of loudspeakers with angles of ± 45° and ± 90° using the Oldenburg sentence test. The investigations of sound localization were conducted in a semicircle and fullcircle setup (7 and 12 equidistant loudspeakers)., Results: SRT (S
-45 N45 : -14.1 dB SNR; S45 N-45 : -16.4 dB SNR; S0 N90 : -13.1 dB SNR; S0 N-90 : -13.4 dB SNR) and test-retest reliability (4 to 6 dB SNR) were collected for speech intelligibility in noise with separated signals. The procedural learning effect for this setup could only be mitigated with 120 training sentences. Significantly smaller SRT values, resulting in better speech discrimination, were found for the test situation of the right compared to the left ear. RMS values could be gathered for sound localization in the semicircle (1,9°) as well as in the fullcircle setup (11,1°). Better results were obtained in the retest of the fullcircle setup., Conclusion: When using the Oldenburg sentence test in noise with spatially separated signals, it is mandatory to perform a training session of 120 sentences in order to minimize the procedural learning effect. Ear-specific SRT values for speech discrimination in noise with separated signal sources are required, which is probably due to the right-ear advantage. A training is recommended for sound localization in the fullcircle setup., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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231. Preventable deaths involving sepsis in England and Wales, 2013-2022: a systematic case series of coroners' reports.
- Author
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Jindal J, Launer D, France HS, Hey M, Song K, Portwood C, Richards G, and Dernie F
- Subjects
- Humans, Wales epidemiology, England epidemiology, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Adolescent, Child, Young Adult, Infant, Child, Preschool, Aged, 80 and over, Cause of Death, Infant, Newborn, Sepsis mortality, Sepsis epidemiology, Coroners and Medical Examiners
- Abstract
Purpose: Coroners' Prevention of Future Death (PFDs) reports are an under-utilized resource to learn about preventable deaths in England and Wales. We aimed to identify sepsis-related PFDs and explore the causes and concerns in this subset of preventable sepsis deaths., Methods: Four thousand three hundred five reports were acquired from the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website between July 2013 and November 2022, which were screened for sepsis. Demographic information, coroners concerns and responses to these reports were extracted and analyzed, including a detailed paediatric subgroup analysis., Results: Two hundred sixty-five reports (6% of total PFDs) involved sepsis-related deaths. The most common cause of death in these reports was "sepsis without septic shock" (42%) and the most common site of infection was the respiratory system (18%) followed by gastrointestinal (16%) and skin (13%) infections. Specific pathogens were named in few reports (27%). Many deaths involved multimorbid patients (49%) or those with recent surgery (26%). Coroners named 773 individual concerns, the most frequent were: a failure to keep accurate records or notes (28%), failure in communication or handover (27%) or failure to recognize risk factors or comorbidities (20%). Paediatric cases frequently reported issues with sepsis screening tools (26%). Sepsis PFDs resulted in 421 individual reports being sent, of which 45% received no response. Most organisations who did respond acknowledged concerns and initiated a new change (74%)., Conclusion: Sepsis-related PFDs provide valuable insights into preventable causes of sepsis and identify important sources of improvement in sepsis care. Wider dissemination of findings is vital to learn from these reports., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.)
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- 2024
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232. Effects of Intraoperative Cochlear Implant Electrode Conditioning on Impedances and Electrically Evoked Compound Action Potentials.
- Author
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Oberhoffner T, Mlynski R, Schraven S, Brademann G, Dierker A, Spitzer P, and Hey M
- Subjects
- Action Potentials physiology, Electric Impedance, Reproducibility of Results, Saline Solution, Evoked Potentials, Auditory physiology, Evoked Potentials, Electric Stimulation methods, Cochlear Implants, Cochlear Implantation methods
- Abstract
Objective: The current study investigates whether, during a Cochlear Implant (CI) surgery, conditioning (i.e. applying short bursts of electrical stimulation) within a saline solution can have positive effects on subsequent intra-operative measurements. We hypothesize that, based on previous research, the impedance values will be reduced, and that the reproducibility of Electrically Evoked Compound Action Potentials (ECAPs) is improved as a result of conditioning., Methods: We conditioned half of the electrode contacts, within a saline solution, before CI insertion, using 23 MED-EL implants. Impedance was measured for both the conditioned and non-conditioned groups at five time points. Repeated ECAP recordings were measured and compared between the conditioned and non-conditioned groups., Results: Impedance of the electrode contacts were reduced by 31% after conditioning in saline solution; however, there were no clinically relevant differences after the implantation of the electrode array. The hypothesis that measurement reproducibility would be increased after conditioning could not be confirmed with our data. Within the saline solution, we observed that 44% of the electrode contacts were covered with air bubbles, which most disappeared after implantation. However, these air bubbles limited the effectiveness of the conditioning within the saline solution. Lastly, the effect of conditioning on the reference electrode stimulation was approximately 16% of the total reduction in impedance., Conclusion: Our data does not suggest that intraoperative conditioning is clinically required for cochlear implantation with MED-EL implants. Additionally, an in-vivo ECAP recording can be considered as a method of conditioning the electrode contacts., Significance: We confirm that the common clinical practice does not need to be changed.
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- 2024
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233. [Retrocochlear diagnostics for acute hearing loss and successful therapy].
- Author
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Hey M, Dambon J, Synowitz M, and Ambrosch P
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Adult, Hearing Disorders, Hearing, Hearing Tests, Audiometry, Hearing Loss, Sudden, Hearing Loss, Unilateral, Hearing Loss, Sensorineural diagnosis
- Abstract
A 41-year-old female patient presented due to acute onset of unilateral hearing loss 3 months previously and persistent since then. Systemic therapy with oral glucocorticoids in decreasing doses had been performed beforehand, but did not lead to any improvement. In the course of audiological diagnostics, based on subjective and objective methods, a retrocochlear hearing disorder was suspected. A meningioma was diagnosed by diagnostic imaging. Subsequent surgical removal achieved a significant hearing improvement., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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234. [Extended preoperative speech audiometric diagnostics for cochlear implant treatment].
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Beyer A, Rieck JH, Mewes A, Dambon JA, and Hey M
- Subjects
- Retrospective Studies, Speech, Cochlear Implants, Cochlear Implantation methods, Hearing Aids, Speech Perception
- Abstract
Background: For severe hearing loss and even profound deafness, cochlear implants (CIs) have become the treatment of choice. For establishment of the CI indication, the preoperative Freiburger monosyllabic word recognition (EV) at 65 dB SPL in free field with a hearing aid (EV
HG 65) and the maximal understanding (mEV) without a hearing aid with headphones results are important. The goal of this retrospective study was to analyse the correlation of word recognition with a hearing aid at 80 dB SPL (EVHG 80) and mEV. This represents an extension to measuring EVHG 65 compared to mEV and to pure-tone audiometry (4FPTA)., Methods: In this study, word recognition with and without a hearing aid was retrospectively analysed for 661 ears. Inclusion criterium was CI implantation at a later date., Results: During preoperative CI diagnostics, an mEV of 0% was found in 334 ears. The EVHG 65 for 485 ears and the EVHG 80 for 335 ears were also 0%. The EV with hearing aid was found to worsen with increasing 4FPTA at both sound pressure levels, although this effect was smaller at 80 dB SPL than at 65 dB SPL. Including only ears with mEV > 0 % (N = 260 ears), a stronger correlation between EVHG 80 and mEV with a difference of (-4.0 ± 16.4%) in comparison to EVHG 65 and mEV with a difference of (-18.3 ± 16.7%) is seen. This shows a significant difference between mEV and EVHG 80 compared to mEV and EVHG 65., Conclusion: At a sound pressure level of 65 dB SPL, EV with hearing aid often does not show the accordance with mEV specified by hearing aid and CI guidelines. The EVHG 80 correlates better with mEV than EVHG 65. For clinical diagnosis it is rational to measure speech discrimination with hearing aid at levels higher than 65 dB SPL., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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235. Optimizing the efficiency of ECAP measurements due to interpolation.
- Author
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Dambon J, Munder P, Mewes A, Böhnke B, Beyer A, Kolonko J, Brademann G, and Hey M
- Subjects
- Evoked Potentials, Auditory physiology, Retrospective Studies, Cochlea, Action Potentials physiology, Electric Stimulation, Cochlear Implants, Cochlear Implantation
- Abstract
Background: Thresholds of electrically evoked compound action potentials (TECAP) may serve as starting points for electrophysiologically based fitting of cochlear implants. Absent TECAP data at single electrodes reduces the number of data points available for fitting and can be substituted by interpolation of measured data points., Aim: To compare complete TECAP profiles with interpolated TECAP profiles of 5/22 (∼22.7%) and 11/22 (50%) electrode contacts., Material and Methods: Single-centre, retrospective, observational study of data from 624 ears implanted with a Slim Modiolar (CI ×32) or Contour Advance (CI ×12, CI24RE(CA)) electrode array (Cochlear Ltd). The deviation of the complete measured TECAP profile from the same profile with missing and therefore interpolated TECAP values was quantified., Results: Interpolated TECAP profiles significantly differ from complete measured profiles especially at the basal and apical electrodes. Reference data for Slim Modiolar and Contour Advance electrodes mean profiles are provided., Conclusions and Significance: Reducing the number of measured TECAP electrodes has to be weighted against losses in the TECAP accuracy of interpolated values. A clinically acceptable compromise may be a reduction from 22 to 11 even non-equidistant data points. While reducing ECAP measurement time, it is accompanied by a minimal loss of accuracy of the TECAP threshold profile.
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- 2023
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236. Preventable deaths involving falls in England and Wales, 2013-22: a systematic case series of coroners' reports.
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Song K, Portwood C, Jindal J, Launer D, France H, Hey M, Richards G, and Dernie F
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- Aged, Humans, Cause of Death, England epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Wales epidemiology, Aged, 80 and over, Coroners and Medical Examiners
- Abstract
Background: Falls in older people are common, leading to significant harm including death. Coroners have a duty to report cases where action should be taken to prevent future deaths, but dissemination of their findings remains poor., Objective: To identify preventable fall-related deaths, classify coroner concerns and explore organisational responses., Design: A retrospective systematic case series of coroners' Prevention of Future Deaths (PFD) reports, from July 2013 (inception) to November 2022., Setting: England and Wales., Methods: Reproducible data collection methods were used to web-scrape and read PFD reports. Demographic information, coroner concerns and responses from organisations were extracted and descriptive statistics used to synthesise data., Results: Five hundred and twenty-seven PFDs (12.5% of PFDs) involved a fall that contributed to death. These deaths predominantly affected older people (median 82 years) in the community (72%), with subsequent death in hospital (70.8%). A high proportion of cases experienced fractures (51.6%), major bleeding (35.9%) or head injury (38.7%). Coroners frequently raised concerns regarding falls risks assessments (20.9%), failures in communication (20.3%) and documentation issues (17.5%). Only 56.7% of PFDs received a response from organisations to whom they were addressed. Organisations tended to produce new protocols (58.5%), improve training (44.6%) and commence audits (34.3%) in response to PFDs., Conclusions: One in eight preventable deaths in England and Wales involved a fall. Addressing concerns raised by coroners should improve falls prevention and care following falls especially for older adults, but the poor response rate may indicate that lessons are not being learned. Wider dissemination of PFD findings may help reduce preventable fall-related deaths in the future., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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237. Facilitation properties in electrically evoked compound action potentials depending on spatial location and on threshold.
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Dambon J, Mewes A, Beyer A, Dambon J, Ambrosch P, and Hey M
- Subjects
- Humans, Action Potentials physiology, Evoked Potentials, Spiral Ganglion, Evoked Potentials, Auditory physiology, Electric Stimulation, Cochlear Nerve physiology, Cochlear Implants, Cochlear Implantation
- Abstract
Spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs) facilitation properties can be recorded utilizing electrically evoked compound action potential (ECAP). While intracochlear variation of the ECAP threshold in relation to its electrode channel is reported, no study investigated its impact on facilitation. In this study, we quantified intracochlear variation of the facilitation properties in cochlear implants (CI) using ECAPs. We hypothesized that the facilitation effect is dependent on the electrode channel and its ECAP threshold. Therefore, ECAPs were recorded in 23 CI subjects. For each subject, five default (channel-derived) and up to two additional (threshold-derived) stimulation sites were defined. Facilitation was quantified by the paradigm introduced by (Hey et al., 2017) with optimized parameter settings. For each channel the maximum facilitated amplitude was determined by a series of ECAP measurements. A linear mixed-effects model was used to investigate the impact of the electrode channel and ECAP threshold on the maximum facilitated amplitude. The maximum facilitated amplitude was found to be dependent on the ECAP threshold and independent on the electrode channel. We conclude that the facilitation paradigm is a useful and feasible tool to gain local information on the SGNs temporal processing patterns., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
238. Evaluation of CI electrode position from imaging: comparison of an automated technique with the established manual method.
- Author
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Mewes A, Bennett C, Dambon J, Brademann G, and Hey M
- Subjects
- Humans, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Cochlea surgery, Cochlear Implantation methods, Cochlear Implants
- Abstract
Background: A manual evaluation of the CI electrode position from CT and DVT scans may be affected by diagnostic errors due to cognitive biases. The aim of this study was to compare the CI electrode localization using an automated method (image-guided cochlear implant programming, IGCIP) with the clinically established manual method., Methods: This prospective experimental study was conducted on a dataset comprising N=50 subjects undergoing cochlear implantation with a Nucleus® CI532 or CI632 Slim Modiolar electrode. Scalar localization, electrode-to-modiolar axis distances (EMD) and angular insertion depth (aDOI) were compared between the automated IGCIP tool and the manual method. Two raters made the manual measurements, and the interrater reliability (±1.96·SD) was determined as the reference for the method comparison. The method comparison was performed using a correlation analysis and a Bland-Altman analysis., Results: Concerning the scalar localization, all electrodes were localized both manually and automatically in the scala tympani. The interrater differences ranged between ±0.2 mm (EMD) and ±10° (aDOI). There was a bias between the automatic and manual method in measuring both localization parameters, which on the one hand was smaller than the interrater variations. On the other hand, this bias depended on the magnitude of the EMD respectively aDOI. A post-hoc analysis revealed that the deviations between the methods were likely due to a different selection of mid-modiolar axis., Conclusions: The IGCIP is a promising tool for automated processing of CT and DVT scans and has useful functionality such as being able to segment the cochlear using post-operative scans. When measuring EMD, the IGCIP tool is superior to the manual method because the smallest possible distance to the axis is determined depending on the cochlear turn, whereas the manual method selects the helicotrema as the reference point rigidly. Functionality to deal with motion artifacts and measurements of aDOI according to the consensus approach are necessary, otherwise the IGCIP is not unrestrictedly ready for clinical use., (© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. Speech comprehension in noise-considerations for ecologically valid assessment of communication skills ability with cochlear implants.
- Author
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Hey M, Mewes A, and Hocke T
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Comprehension, Speech, Cochlear Implants, Speech Perception, Cochlear Implantation methods, Hearing Loss diagnosis, Hearing Loss surgery
- Abstract
Background: Nowadays, cochlear implant (CI) patients mostly show good to very good speech comprehension in quiet, but there are known problems with communication in everyday noisy situations. There is thus a need for ecologically valid measurements of speech comprehension in real-life listening situations for hearing-impaired patients. The additional methodological effort must be balanced with clinical human and spatial resources. This study investigates possible simplifications of a complex measurement setup., Methods: The study included 20 adults from long-term follow-up after CI fitting with postlingual onset of hearing impairment. The complexity of the investigated listening situations was influenced by changing the spatiality of the noise sources and the temporal characteristics of the noise. To compare different measurement setups, speech reception thresholds (SRT) were measured unilaterally with different CI processors and settings. Ten normal-hearing subjects served as reference., Results: In a complex listening situation with four loudspeakers, differences in SRT from CI subjects to the control group of up to 8 dB were found. For CI subjects, this SRT correlated with the situation with frontal speech signal and fluctuating interference signal from the side with R
2 = 0.69. For conditions with stationary interfering signals, R2 values <0.2 were found., Conclusion: There is no universal solution for all audiometric questions with respect to the spatiality and temporal characteristics of noise sources. In the investigated context, simplification of the complex spatial audiometric setting while using fluctuating competing signals was possible., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Extended Preoperative Audiometry for Outcome Prediction and Risk Analysis in Patients Receiving Cochlear Implants.
- Author
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Rieck JH, Beyer A, Mewes A, Caliebe A, and Hey M
- Abstract
Background: The outcome of cochlear implantation has improved over the last decades, but there are still patients with less benefit. Despite numerous studies examining the cochlear implant (CI) outcome, variations in speech comprehension with CI remains incompletely explained. The aim of this study was therefore to examine preoperative pure-tone audiogram and speech comprehension as well as aetiology, to investigate their relationship with postoperative speech comprehension in CI recipients., Methods: A retrospective study with 664 ears of 530 adult patients was conducted. Correlations between the target variable postoperative word comprehension with the preoperative speech and sound comprehension as well as aetiology were investigated. Significant correlations were inserted into multivariate models. Speech comprehension measured as word recognition score at 70 dB with CI was analyzed as (i) a continuous and (ii) a dichotomous variable., Results: All variables that tested preoperative hearing were significantly correlated with the dichotomous target; with the continuous target, all except word comprehension at 65 dB with hearing aid. The strongest correlation with postoperative speech comprehension was seen for monosyllabic words with hearing aid at 80 dB. The preoperative maximum word comprehension was reached or surpassed by 97.3% of CI patients. Meningitis and congenital diseases were strongly negatively associated with postoperative word comprehension. The multivariate model was able to explain 40% of postoperative variability., Conclusion: Speech comprehension with hearing aid at 80 dB can be used as a supplementary preoperative indicator of CI-aided speech comprehension and should be measured regularly in the clinical routine. Combining audiological and aetiological variables provides more insights into the variability of the CI outcome, allowing for better patient counselling.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. School Burnout after COVID-19, Prevalence and Role of Different Risk and Protective Factors in Preteen Students.
- Author
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Lacombe N, Hey M, Hofmann V, Pagnotta C, and Squillaci M
- Abstract
Background: Current data show an increase in stress among youth since the COVID-19 pandemic, raising the question of the measures to be put in place to limit it., Aim: The aim of this study is to measure the prevalence of burnout and the different risk and protective factors of burnout among students and to compare the mean scores obtained with those collected in a similar sample in 2014., Method: Perceived health, school burnout, and the different risk and protective factors among students were measured by self-reported questionnaires among a sample of 184 students (11-13 years old)., Results: The results indicate significantly higher burnout scores than in 2014. Different variables were predictive of school burnout: 1. At the individual level, a low academic achievement in mathematics, somatic symptoms, and the expressed stress; 2. At the interpersonal level, lack of support from peers, teachers, and parents and a negative classroom climate; 3. At the pandemic level, the increased workload related to the consequences of COVID-19. The factors with the greatest impact are confidence in the future, perceived stress, parental supports, and mathematics results., Conclusions: An intervention program targeting these four factors among burned out students would be relevant to set up in order to reduce its prevalence.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. Comparisons of electrophysiological and psychophysical fitting methods for cochlear implants.
- Author
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Müller-Deile J, Neben N, Dillier N, Büchner A, Mewes A, Junge F, Lai W, Schuessler M, and Hey M
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Prospective Studies, Noise, Cochlear Implants, Cochlear Implantation methods, Speech Perception physiology, Deafness rehabilitation
- Abstract
Objective: This study compared two different versions of an electrophysiology-based software-guided cochlear implant fitting method with a procedure employing standard clinical software. The two versions used electrically evoked compound action potential (ECAP) thresholds for either five or all twenty-two electrodes to determine sound processor stimulation level profiles. Objective and subjective performance results were compared between software-guided and clinical fittings., Design: Prospective, double-blind, single-subject repeated-measures with permuted ABCA sequences., Study Sample: 48 post linguistically deafened adults with ≤15 years of severe-to-profound deafness who were newly unilaterally implanted with a Nucleus device., Results: Speech recognition in noise and quiet was not significantly different between software- guided and standard methods, but there was a visit/learning-effect. However, the 5-electrode method gave scores on the SSQ speech subscale 0.5 points lower than the standard method. Clinicians judged usability for all methods as acceptable, as did subjects for comfort. Analysis of stimulation levels and ECAP thresholds suggested that the 5-electrode method could be refined., Conclusions: Speech recognition was not inferior using either version of the electrophysiology-based software-guided fitting method compared with the standard method. Subject-reported speech perception was slightly inferior with the five-electrode method. Software-guided methods saved about 10 min of clinician's time versus standard fittings.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
243. [Speech comprehension in noise-considerations for ecologically valid assessment of communication skills ability with cochlear implants. German version].
- Author
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Hey M, Mewes A, and Hocke T
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Speech, Comprehension, Cochlear Implants, Speech Perception, Cochlear Implantation methods, Hearing Loss diagnosis, Hearing Loss surgery
- Abstract
Background: Nowadays, cochlear implant (CI) patients mostly show good to very good speech comprehension in quiet, but there are known problems with communication in everyday noisy situations. There is thus a need for ecologically valid measurements of speech comprehension in real-life listening situations for hearing-impaired patients. The additional methodological effort must be balanced with clinical human and spatial resources. This study investigates possible simplifications of a complex measurement setup., Methods: The study included 20 adults from long-term follow-up after CI fitting with postlingual onset of hearing impairment. The complexity of the investigated listening situations was influenced by changing the spatiality of the noise sources and the temporal characteristics of the noise. To compare different measurement setups, speech reception thresholds (SRT) were measured unilaterally with different CI processors and settings. Ten normal-hearing subjects served as reference., Results: In a complex listening situation with four loudspeakers, differences in SRT from CI subjects to the control group of up to 8 dB were found. For CI subjects, this SRT correlated with the situation with frontal speech signal and fluctuating interference signal from the side with R
2 = 0.69. For conditions with stationary interfering signals, R2 values <0.2 were found., Conclusion: There is no universal solution for all audiometric questions with respect to the spatiality and temporal characteristics of noise sources. In the investigated context, simplification of the complex spatial audiometric setting while using fluctuating competing signals was possible., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
244. Following the organism to map synthetic genomics.
- Author
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Hey M and Szymanski EA
- Abstract
Synthetic genomics, or engineering biology at the level of whole genomes and whole organisms, is an emerging outgrowth of parts-based synthetic biology. This nascent subfield is also diverse and difficult to characterize. As social scientists investigating responsible research and innovation in synthetic genomics, we suggest that focusing on the organism is a fruitful approach to making sense of the diversity it encompasses. Here, we offer a heuristic in the form of a tagging system to organize projects by the roles the engineered organism is asked to perform. We suggest several reasons why this system is useful for understanding the current shape and future directions of the field, especially in light of the need to ask: how does engineering biology contribute to building a future of sustainable relationships with other creatures?, Competing Interests: All authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (© 2022 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. Ecological Momentary Assessment to Obtain Signal Processing Technology Preference in Cochlear Implant Users.
- Author
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Hey M, Hersbach AA, Hocke T, Mauger SJ, Böhnke B, and Mewes A
- Abstract
Background: To assess the performance of cochlear implant users, speech comprehension benefits are generally measured in controlled sound room environments of the laboratory. For field-based assessment of preference, questionnaires are generally used. Since questionnaires are typically administered at the end of an experimental period, they can be inaccurate due to retrospective recall. An alternative known as ecological momentary assessment (EMA) has begun to be used for clinical research. The objective of this study was to determine the feasibility of using EMA to obtain in-the-moment responses from cochlear implant users describing their technology preference in specific acoustic listening situations., Methods: Over a two-week period, eleven adult cochlear implant users compared two listening programs containing different sound processing technologies during everyday take-home use. Their task was to compare and vote for their preferred program., Results: A total of 205 votes were collected from acoustic environments that were classified into six listening scenes. The analysis yielded different patterns of voting among the subjects. Two subjects had a consistent preference for one sound processing technology across all acoustic scenes, three subjects changed their preference based on the acoustic scene, and six subjects had no conclusive preference for either technology., Conclusion: Results show that EMA is suitable for quantifying real-world self-reported preference, showing inter-subject variability in different listening environments. However, there is uncertainty that patients will not provide sufficient spontaneous feedback. One improvement for future research is a participant forced prompt to improve response rates.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. Quality-assured training in the evaluation of cochlear implant electrode position: a prospective experimental study.
- Author
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Mewes A, Burg S, Brademann G, Dambon JA, and Hey M
- Subjects
- Cochlea surgery, Electrodes, Implanted, Humans, Prospective Studies, Cochlear Implantation methods, Cochlear Implants
- Abstract
Background: The objective of this study was to demonstrate the utility of an approach in training predoctoral medical students, to enable them to measure electrode-to-modiolus distances (EMDs) and insertion-depth angles (aDOIs) in cochlear implant (CI) imaging at the performance level of a single senior rater., Methods: This prospective experimental study was conducted on a clinical training dataset comprising patients undergoing cochlear implantation with a Nucleus® CI532 Slim Modiolar electrode (N = 20) or a CI512 Contour Advance electrode (N = 10). To assess the learning curves of a single medical student in measuring EMD and aDOI, interrater differences (senior-student) were compared with the intrarater differences of a single senior rater (test-retest). The interrater and intrarater range were both calculated as the distance between the 0.1th and 99.9th percentiles. A "deliberate practice" training approach was used to teach knowledge and skills, while correctives were applied to minimize faulty data-gathering and data synthesis., Results: Intrarater differences of the senior rater ranged from - 0.5 to 0.5 mm for EMD and - 14° to 16° for aDOI (respective medians: 0 mm and 0°). Use of the training approach led to interrater differences that matched this after the 4th (EMD) and 3rd (aDOI) feedback/measurement series had been provided to the student., Conclusions: The training approach enabled the student to evaluate the CI electrode position at the performance level of a senior rater. This finding may offer a basis for ongoing clinical quality assurance for the assessment of CI electrode position., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Evaluation of a Transimpedance Matrix Algorithm to Detect Anomalous Cochlear Implant Electrode Position.
- Author
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Hoppe U, Brademann G, Stöver T, Ramos de Miguel A, Cowan R, Manrique M, Falcón-González JC, Hey M, Baumann U, Huarte A, Liebscher T, Bennett C, English R, Neben N, and Ramos Macías A
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Cochlea diagnostic imaging, Cochlea surgery, Electrodes, Implanted, Humans, Prospective Studies, Cochlear Implantation methods, Cochlear Implants
- Abstract
Introduction: Transimpedance measurements from cochlear implant electrodes have the potential to identify anomalous electrode array placement, such as tip fold-over (TFO) or fold-back, basal electrode kinking, or buckling. Analysing transimpedance may thus replace intraoperative or post-operative radiological imaging to detect any potential misplacements. A transimpedance algorithm was previously developed to detect deviations from a normal electrode position with the aim of intraoperatively detecting TFO. The algorithm had been calibrated on 35 forced, tip folded electrode arrays in six temporal bones to determine the threshold criterion required to achieve a sensitivity of 100%. Our primary objective here was to estimate the specificity of this TFO algorithm in patients, in a prospective study, for a series of electrode arrays shown to be normally inserted by post-operative imaging., Methods: Intracochlear voltages were intraoperatively recorded for 157 ears, using Cochlear's Custom Sound™ EP 5 electrophysiological software (Cochlear Ltd., Sydney, NSW, Australia), for both Nucleus® CI512 and CI532 electrode arrays. The algorithm analysed the recorded 22 × 22 transimpedance matrix (TIM) and results were displayed as a heatmap intraoperatively, only visible to the technician in the operating theatre. After all clinical data were collected, the algorithm was evaluated on the bench. The algorithm measures the transimpedance gradients and corresponding phase angles (θ) throughout the TIM and calculates the gradient phase range. If this was greater than the predetermined threshold, the algorithm classified the electrode array insertion as having a TFO., Results: Five ears had no intraoperative TIM and four anomalous matrices were identified from heatmaps and removed from the specificity analysis. Using the 148 remaining data sets (n = 103 CI532 and n = 45 CI512), the algorithm had an average specificity of 98.6% (95.80%-99.75%)., Conclusion: The algorithm was found to be an effective screening tool for the identification of TFOs. Its specificity was within acceptable levels and resulted in a positive predictive value of 76%, with an estimated incidence of fold-over of 4% in perimodiolar arrays. This would mean 3 out of 4 cases flagged as a fold-over would be correctly identified by the algorithm, with the other being a false positive. The measurements were applied easily in theatre allowing it to be used as a routine clinical tool for confirming correct electrode placement., (© 2022 The Author(s). Published by S. Karger AG, Basel.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. Electrode Translocations in Perimodiolar Cochlear Implant Electrodes: Audiological and Electrophysiological Outcome.
- Author
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Liebscher T, Mewes A, Hoppe U, Hornung J, Brademann G, and Hey M
- Subjects
- Adult, Electrodes, Implanted, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Scala Tympani surgery, Cochlear Implantation, Cochlear Implants
- Abstract
Introduction: Despite using the soft-surgery technique, cochlear implantation may increase the damage of the intracochlear structures due to a scalar translocation of the electrode. The aim of this work was to investigate the incidence as well as the audiological and electrophysiological outcome for electrode translocations and complete scala tympani insertions of perimodiolar electrodes within a large group of patients., Material and Methods: The investigations were performed retrospectively on 255 adult subjects with a Nucleus Contour Advance or Slim Modiolar electrode (Cochlear Ltd.). The scalar position was assessed by postoperative rotational tomography. Intraoperative and one year after CI activation measured ECAP thresholds were examined as well as the postoperative speech recognition in quiet using the Freiburg monosyllable word test., Results: The incidence of a translocation was significantly lower with the Slim Modiolar than with the Contour Advance electrode (5.1% versus 32.3%; p<0.05). With a scala tympani placement the median speech recognition score was 75% (range: 20- 100%) with the Contour Advance and 72.5% (range: 27.5-95%) with the Slim Modiolar electrode. In cases with an electrode translocation, speech recognition scores show a median of 75% (range: 45-100%) and 73.8% (range: 40-80%), respectively. No significant differences in speech recognition were found between translocations and scala tympani insertions with both electrodes. Compared to scala tympani insertions, electrode translocations yielded higher ECAP thresholds at apical and medial electrode contacts (p<0.05)., Conclusion: The incidence of an electrode translocation is determined for both perimodiolar electrode types analyzed in this work. ECAP measurements provide additional information for detecting translocations compared to radiological imaging. However, the postoperative speech recognition in quiet was not affected by the scalar position in the electrodes examined here., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier GmbH.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. Erratum zu: Charakterisierung eines geschlossenen Logatomtests : Erhebung audiometrischer Kenndaten: Diskriminationsfunktion und Reproduzierbarkeit.
- Author
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Hörmann L, Ambrosch P, and Hey M
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. Von der Stimmgabel zum 7T MRT - Der Einsatz objektiver Verfahren in der Audiologie.
- Author
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Hoppe U and Hey M
- Subjects
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Audiology
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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