Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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WITHDRAWN
NA
INTERVENTIONAL
2019-08-01
2021-01-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Aim 2: Characterizing the effects of VI stimulation on clinical status: Vestibular-mediated behaviors are crucial to patient wellbeing and are degraded after severe vestibular damage. The investigators will initiate the assessment of the VI's clinical utility by quantifying the VOR, posture/gait, and perception using paradigms that isolate the VI's contributions to these behaviors (e.g., VOR during yaw-axis rotation) or paradigms that recapitulate normal activities such as self-generated walking, which require the brain to synthesize the angular velocity information provided by the VI with other sensorimotor cues. The investigators will study these vestibulopathic patients before the VI is activated ('pre'), one hour after activation ('acute,' which allows participants adequate time to adapt to the tonic VI stimulation), and then daily for three days while motion-modulated stimulation is provided by the VI during normal activities ('chronic'). The investigators will also have participants complete several questionnaires prior to stimulation and again in the acute and chronic stimulation states to quantify their subjective responses to VI stimulation. These will include questionnaires that characterize the severity of subjective dizziness and imbalance (Dizziness Handicap Inventory \[DHI\], Activities Specific Balance Confidence Scale \[ABC\]); oscillopsia (the Oscillopsia Functional Impact Scale); and a more general quality of life measurement (the Short Form-36 Health Survey). These questionnaires will be modified so they reflect current levels of symptomatology, since the study team will be capturing changes over a short time-frame. The investigators expect that behavior and symptoms will improve during the period of motion-modulated stimulation such that measurements and subjective reports in the 'chronic' stimulation state will be closer to normal than during the 'acute' or 'pre' stimulation states. More complex behaviors (e.g. balance while walking, ABC scores) are predicted to improve more slowly than behaviors that rely on isolated angular velocity cues (e.g., yaw axis VOR, oscillopsia scores). In sum, this study will provide a solid foundation to build upon for future research in which the investigators will further examine the clinical utility of the VI.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
BASIC_SCIENCE
NONE
Study Groups
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Vestibular & Cochlear Implant Patients
* scheduled for CI surgery because of deafness
* a minimum of five year history of documented absence of auditory and vestibular function, based on review of their audiograms and vestibular tests.
* Specific vestibular criteria are: peak ice water caloric response of less than 3 deg/s for each ear; yaw VOR time constant \< 3.0 sec and gain \< 0.25; and reduced head impulse gain (\<0.25) for all canal planes.
* Specific audiographic criteria: 80dB or greater sensorineural hearing loss in both ears
Vestibular prosthesis/implant
The intervention is a vestibular prosthesis which our collaborators at the University of Geneva are implanting into the inner ear in deaf patients without vestibular function who are receiving a cochlear implant. The vestibular implant (VI) has three rate sensors and senses angular head velocity in three dimensions and provides this information to the brain by stimulation the afferent nerves innervating the three semicircular canals. Our goal is to use the VI to better understand how the brain processes this prosthetic information and uses it to generate meaningful behavioral responses including eye movements, postural control, and perception.
Vestibular Implant Stimulation
VI subjects will be studied before the implant is activated (pre) and then after it is turned on (acute On); this will take about 2 hrs. Then they will have 8 hours of motion-modulated VI stimulation while they actively explore the hospital environment, after studies will be repeated (chronic On). Each set of outcome experiments will be performed twice, once with and once without low-levels of stochastic noise added to the VI stimulation provided for the 8-hour period. The noise amplitude is tailored to each patient to maximize stochastic resonance so extraction \& integration of spatial signal provided by the VI will always be the first experiment, but the order of the subsequent outcome sessions (active/passive head rotations, tilt/translation motion discrimination and VOR behavioral changes \& postural control) will be randomized. VI subjects will participate in 4 full-day sessions, each separated by at least a month.
Interventions
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Vestibular prosthesis/implant
The intervention is a vestibular prosthesis which our collaborators at the University of Geneva are implanting into the inner ear in deaf patients without vestibular function who are receiving a cochlear implant. The vestibular implant (VI) has three rate sensors and senses angular head velocity in three dimensions and provides this information to the brain by stimulation the afferent nerves innervating the three semicircular canals. Our goal is to use the VI to better understand how the brain processes this prosthetic information and uses it to generate meaningful behavioral responses including eye movements, postural control, and perception.
Vestibular Implant Stimulation
VI subjects will be studied before the implant is activated (pre) and then after it is turned on (acute On); this will take about 2 hrs. Then they will have 8 hours of motion-modulated VI stimulation while they actively explore the hospital environment, after studies will be repeated (chronic On). Each set of outcome experiments will be performed twice, once with and once without low-levels of stochastic noise added to the VI stimulation provided for the 8-hour period. The noise amplitude is tailored to each patient to maximize stochastic resonance so extraction \& integration of spatial signal provided by the VI will always be the first experiment, but the order of the subsequent outcome sessions (active/passive head rotations, tilt/translation motion discrimination and VOR behavioral changes \& postural control) will be randomized. VI subjects will participate in 4 full-day sessions, each separated by at least a month.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* minimum of five year history of documented absence of auditory \& vestibular function, based on review of their audiograms \& vestibular tests
* Specific vestibular criteria are: peak ice water caloric response of less than 3 deg/s for each ear; yaw VOR time constant \< 3.0 sec and gain \< 0.25; and reduced head impulse gain (\<0.25) for all canal planes.
* Specific audiographic criteria: 80dB or greater sensorineural hearing loss in both ears
Exclusion Criteria
* not scheduled for cochlear implant/vestibular implant surgery
* unable to walk 50m
* other neurological disorder (other than migraine), otologic disease (other than presbycusis)
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Ohio State University
OTHER
University of Geneva, Switzerland
OTHER
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Richard Lewis
Associate Professor, Otolaryngology and Neurology; Director, Jenks Vestibular Laboratory
Locations
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Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Ohio State University
Columbus, Ohio, United States
Universite de Geneve Hospital (UNIGE)
Geneva, , Switzerland
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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2019A008661
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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