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When a Hearing Aid Isnt Enough

Kitty Grutzmacher had contended with poor hearing for a decade, but the problem had worsened over the past year. Even with her hearing aids, there was little or no sound, she said.

I was avoiding going out in groups. I stopped playing cards, stopped going to Bible study, even going to church.

Her audiologist was unable to offer Grutzmacher, a retired nurse in Elgin, Illinois, a solution. But she found her way to the cochlear implant program at Northwestern University.

There, Krystine Mullins, an audiologist who assesses patients hearing and counsels them about their options, explained that surgically implanting this electronic device usually substantially improved a patients ability to understand speech.

I had never even thought about it, Grutzmacher said.

That she was 84 was, in itself, immaterial. As long as youre healthy enough to undergo surgery, age is not a concern, Mullins said. One recent Northwestern implant patient had been 99.

Some patients need to ponderthis decision, given that after the operation, clearer hearing still requires months of practice and adaptation, and the degree of improvement is hard to predict. You cant try it out in advance, Mullins said.

But Grutzmacher didnt hesitate. I couldnt go on the way I was, she said ina postimplant phone interview onethatinvolved frustrating repetition, but would have been impossible a few weeks earlier. I was completely isolated.

Hearing loss among older adults remains vastly undertreated.泭have estimated that it affects about 1 in 5 people ages 65 to 74 and more than half of those over 75.

The inner ear mechanisms werent built for longevity, said Cameron Wick, an ear, nose, and throat specialist at University Hospitals in Cleveland.

Although hearing loss can contribute to,泭,泭and, fewer than a third of people over 70 who could benefit from hearing aids have worn them.

For those who do, if your hearing aids no longer give you clarity, you should ask for a cochlear implant assessment, Wick said.

Twenty-five years ago, it was a novelty to implant people over 80, said Charles Della Santina, director of the Johns Hopkins Cochlear Implant Center. Now, its pretty routine practice.

In fact, a study published in 2023 in the journal Otology & Neurotology reported that cochlear implantation was increasing at a higher rate in patients over 80 than in any other age group.

Until recently, Medicare covered the procedure for only those with extremely limited hearing who could correctly repeat less than 40% of the words on a word recognition test.泭Without insurance cochlear implantation can cost $100,000 or more for the device, surgery, counseling, and follow-up many older people dont have the option.

It was incredibly frustrating, because patients on Medicare were being excluded, Della Santina said. (Similarly, traditional Medicare doesnt cover hearing aids, and Medicare Advantage plans with hearing benefits still leavepatients .)

Then, in 2022, Medicare expanded cochlear implant coverage to includeolder adultswho could identify up to 60% of wordson a speech recognition test, increasing the pool of eligible patients.

Still, while theestimates that implants are increasing by about 10% annually,泭public awareness and referrals from audiologists .泭Lessthan 10% of eligible adults with moderate to profound hearing loss receive them, the alliance says.

Cochlear implantation requires commitment. After the patient receives testing and counseling, the surgery, which is an outpatient procedure, typically takes two to three hours. Many adults undergo surgery on one ear and continue using a hearing aid in the other; some later go on to get a second implant.

Thesurgeon implants an internal receiver beneath the patients scalp and inserts electrodes, which stimulate the auditory nerve, into the inner ear; patients also wear an external processor behind the ear. (Clinical trials of an entirely internal device are underway.)

Two or three weeks later, after the swelling recedes and the patients stitches have been removed, an audiologist activates the device.

When we first turn it on, you wont like what you hear, Wick cautioned. Voices initially sound robotic, mechanical. It takes several weeks for the brain to adjust and for patients to reliably decipher words and sentences.

A cochlear implant is not something you just turn on and it works, Mullins said. It takes time and some training to get used to the new sound quality. She assigns homework, like reading aloud for 20 minutes a day and watching television while reading the captions.

Within one to three months, boom, the brain starts getting it, and speech clarity takes off, Wick said. By six months, older adults will have reached most of their enhanced clarity, though some improvement continues for a year or longer.

How much improvement? Thats measured by two hearing tests: The CNC (consonant-nucleus-consonant) test, in which patients are asked to repeat individual words, and theAzBioSentence Test, in whichthe words to be repeatedare part of full sentences.

At Northwestern, Mullins tells older prospective patients that one year after activation, a 60% to 70% AzBio score correctly repeating60 to 70 words out of 100 is typical.

插泭of about 1,100 adults, published in 2023, found that after implantation, patients 65 andoldercould correctly identify about 50 additional words (out of 100) on the AzBio test, an increase comparable to the younger cohort's results.

Participants over 80 showed roughly as much improvement as those in their late 60s and 70s.

They transition from having a hard time following a conversation to being able to participate, said Della Santina, an author of the study. Decade by decade, cochlear implant results have gotten better and better.

Moreover, an analysis of 70 older patients experiences at 13 implantation centers, for which Wick was the lead author, found not only clinically important hearing improvements but also.

Scores on a standard cognitive test climbed, too: After six months of using a cochlear implant, 54% of participants had a passing score, compared with 36% presurgery.泭Studies that focus on people have shown that those with mild cognitive impairment also benefit from implants.

Nevertheless, were cautious not to overpromise, Wick said. Usually, the longer that older patients have had significant hearing loss, the harder they must work to regain their hearing and the less improvement they may see.

A minority of patients feel dizzy or nauseated after surgery, though most recover quickly.泭Some struggle with the technology, including phone appsthat adjust the sound.泭Implants are less effective in noisy settings like crowded restaurants, and since they are designed to clarify speech, music may not sound great.

For thoseat the upper end of Medicare eligibilitywho already understand roughly half of the speech they hear, implantation may not seem worth the effort. Just because someone is eligible doesnt mean its in their best interests, Wick said.

For Grutzmacher, though, the choice seemed clear. Her initial testing found that even with hearing aids, she understood only 4% of words on the AzBio. Two weeks after Mullins turned on the cochlear implant, Grutzmacher could understand 46% using a hearing aid in her other ear.

She reported that after a few rough days,泭her ability to talk by phone had improved, and instead of turning the television volume up to 80, I can hear it at 20, she said.

So she was making plans. This week, Im going out to lunch with a friend, she said. Im going to play cards with a small group of women. I have a luncheon at church on Saturday.

The New Old Age is produced through a partnership with.

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