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Cochlear Implants: How Are They Different from Hearing Aids?

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What Is a Hearing Aid?

A hearing aid is a small electronic device that makes some sounds louder for a person with hearing loss. Hearing aids are typically worn one of two ways: either completely in the ear, or with parts inside of and behind the ear. They can help people in both quiet and noisy environments so they can listen and communicate better. Hearing aids are often used to improve hearing and speech understanding for people with a kind of hearing loss called “sensory-neural hearing loss.” This kind of hearing loss is caused when the nerve cells in the inner ear, called hair cells, are damaged. The more damage is done to a person’s hair cells, the more severe the hearing loss becomes. Individuals with severe hearing loss need a lot more power from the hearing aid for it to help them. If the hair cells are too damaged, hearing aids may provide little to no help to the user when it comes to understanding speech. So, what’s the next step after a hearing aid does not help a person with a severe to profound hearing loss? That person may be a candidate for a cochlear implant.

How Is a Cochlear Implant Different from a Hearing Aid?

In order to better understand the differences between a hearing aid and a cochlear implant, it is important to understand how each one works. A hearing aid has three basic parts: the microphone, amplifier, and speaker. Sound goes into a hearing aid through its microphone. When the sound is in there, the amplifier makes sound louder. Then, that sound is sent to the inner ear (a part of the ear you cannot see when you look at someone) through speaker.

Once the sound gets to a person’s inner ear, the hair cells in that area send the sound to the hearing (auditory) nerve. This nerve sends the sound signal on to the brain. The brain makes sense of that signal so a person can understand it. When a person has a hearing loss, the hair cells that send the signal from one spot to another become damaged. When they become damaged, the signal that they send to the brain becomes unclear. When the brain gets a signal that is not clear, it is hard for that person to understand speech, even though the sounds are loud enough to hear. Words may sound garbled to the person with hearing loss.

A cochlear implant replaces the job of the hair cells. Instead of the (damaged) hair cells sending sounds to the hearing nerve and on to the brain, a cochlear implant uses a few electrodes, or tiny metal contacts, that send electrical signals to the hearing nerve and on to the brain. That way, the hair cells are not used at all. But for us to use a cochlear implant, the implant has to be able to change sound into an electrical signal. Otherwise, the electrodes will not help us. Cochlear implants have several parts that allow this to happen.

When we talk about a cochlear implant, we are actually talking about a device with multiple parts. There are external (outside) parts to the implant (called the “microphone,” “sound processor,” and “transmitter”), and internal (inside) parts to the implant (called the “receiver-stimulator” and the “electrode array”). Sounds are collected and changed by the outside parts and sent to the inside parts. Remember, sound has to change into electrical signals so that when it reaches the electrodes, they can pass these signals on to the brain. This process is described here:

  1. Microphone: Picks up sound from the environment and sends it to the sound processor.
  2. Sound Processor: Changes the signal picked up by the microphone into a digital code, which is then sent to the transmitter.
  3. Transmitter: Sends the digital code from the processor to one of the inside parts, the receiver-stimulator.
  4. Receiver-Stimulator: Is surgically placed under the person's scalp. It changes the digital signal from the transmitter into electrical signals that are sent to the electrode array.
  5. Electrode Array: Is surgically implanted into a part of the inner ear known as the cochlea. The electrodes send the electrical signals to the hearing nerve, which sends those signals to the brain.

The outside parts of a cochlear implant usually look like a hearing aid and sit behind the person’s ear. Unlike a hearing aid, the part that sits behind the ear is connected to something else: a magnet. That magnet sits on the person’s scalp. It attaches to the magnet of the receiver-stimulator (one of the inside parts to the implant): This is the part where the outside part of the device connects to the inside part of the device. 

Thanks to new technology, not all cochlear implants need to be worn behind the ear. Now, certain cochlear implants can be worn just on the scalp, with nothing on a person’s ear!

Related Post: “Cochlear Implants: Am I A Candidate?"

Maria E. Pomponio, AuD, CCC-A, FAAA

Maria E. Pomponio, AuD, CCC-A, FAAA is an Audiologist at the Temple Head and Neck Institute and an Instructor of Clinical Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University.  Maria specializes in newborn hearing screenings, pediatric diagnostic assessment, the evaluation and management of central auditory processing disorders in adults and children, electrophysiology, vestibular evaluations, and ototoxic monitoring.

Sarah Sohns, AuD

Sarah Sohns, AuD, is an Audiologist at the Temple Head & Neck Institute and an Instructor of Clinical Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University. Sarah specializes in auditory-evoked responses, matching amplification technology to patient needs using evidence-based practice, tinnitus evaluation and management, validation of hearing aid fittings, and ototoxicity.

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