Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Opto-electrical Cochlear Implants
Sponsor: Northwestern University
Summary
Neural stimulation with photons has been proposed for a next generation of cochlear implants (CIs). The potential benefit of photonic over electrical stimulation is its spatially selective activation of small populations of spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs). Stimulating smaller neuron populations along the cochlea provides a larger number of independent channels to encode acoustic information. Hearing could therefore be restored at a higher fidelity and performance in noisy listening environments as well as music appreciation are likely to improve . While it has been demonstrated that optical radiation evokes auditory responses in animal models, it is not clear whether the radiant exposures used in the animal experiments are sufficient to stimulate the auditory system of humans. The proposed tests are: 1. to demonstrate that light delivery systems (LDSs) can be inserted and oriented optimally in the human cochlea. 2. to show that the LDSs are able to deliver sufficient amount of energy to evoke a compound action potential of the auditory nerve. 3. to validate that the fluence rate (energy / target area) required for stimulation is below the maximal fluence rate, which damaged the cochlea in animal experiments. 4. to show that combined optical and electrical stimulation is able to significantly lower the threshold required for optical stimulation in humans. The endpoints for the study are either the completion of the experiments proposed or the demonstration that not sufficient energy can be delivered safely in the human cochlea to develop an action potential.
Official title: Opto-Electrical Cochlear Implants
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 89 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
30
Start Date
2025-04-20
Completion Date
2026-12
Last Updated
2025-05-08
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
electrical stimulation
A cochlear implant electrode will be inserted through a cochleostomy into scala tympani of the cochlear basal turn. Custom software on a laptop computer will be used to control the delivery of a sequence of charge balanced current pules.
optical stimulation
Optical fibers will be inserted through a cochleostomy into scala tympani of the cochlear basal turn. Custom software will be used to control the delivery of a sequence of charge balanced current pules.
combined optical and electrical stimulation
A short hybrid array consisting of optical sources and electrical contacts will be inserted through a cochleostomy into scala tympani of the cochlear basal turn. Biphasic electrical current pulse and optical pulse delivery will be controlled in amplitude and timing by a computer.
Locations (3)
University of Miami
Coral Gables, Florida, United States
Central DuPage Hospital Association
Winfield, Illinois, United States
University of Missouri
Columbia, Missouri, United States