MedPath

Study of the Fine Structure and Temporal Envelope of the Human Cochlea in Response to Human Vocalizations

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Structure Cochlea
Temporal Envelope Cochlea
Registration Number
NCT06499584
Lead Sponsor
CHU de Reims
Brief Summary

In humans, surface electrophysiological recordings of the cochlear nerve in response to a sound stimulus provide information about the cochlear's ability to encode sound. Depending on the stimulus, the fine structure and temporal envelope of the signal will vary, allowing us to determine its characteristics. By phenotyping patients before surgery using subjective and objective audiometric tests, it will be possible to isolate for each patient the moment when the fine structure disappears and when the temporal envelope is effective.

Detailed Description

During functional cerebellopontine angle surgery, a spherical electrode is placed on the human cochlear nerve to monitor hearing. Once the electrode is in place, clicks and speech signals with and without noise are delivered to analyze the cochlear electrophysiological signal produced. Depending on the characteristics recorded, this signal can be used to determine how fine structure and temporal envelope are encoded by the cochlea. Prior to surgery, each patient is evaluated by an audiologist to determine quiet and noise thresholds, tone and speech, electrocochleography, distortion testing, tympanometry, ABR and psychoacoustic testing.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
20
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To compare the spectrum of coding of complex and ecological soundsAt 48 months

The goal is to compare the spectrum of coding of complex and ecological sounds (logatomes in the form of vowels or syllables: association of a consonant and a vowel) in the human auditory nerve between patients defined as normo and poorly hearing according to preoperative audiometric tests.

To compare the amplitude of coding of complex and ecological soundsAt 48 months

The goal is to compare the amplitude of coding of complex and ecological sounds (logatomes in the form of vowels or syllables: association of a consonant and a vowel) in the human auditory nerve between patients defined as normo and poorly hearing according to preoperative audiometric tests.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The amplitude of the temporal envelope of theat 48 months

To study the amplitude of the temporal envelope of the signal collected for each logatome in the general population studied and within the normal-hearing and hard-of-hearing groups.

The amplitude of the fine structure of the signalat 48 months

To study the amplitude of the fine structure of the signal collected for each logatome in the general population studied and within the normal-hearing and hard-of-hearing groups.

The spectrum of the temporal envelope of the signalAt 48 months

To study the spectrum of the temporal envelope of the signal collected for each logatome in the general population studied and within the normal-hearing and hard-of-hearing groups.

The spectrum of the fine structure of the signalat 48 months

To study the spectrum of the fine structure of the signal collected for each logatome in the general population studied and within the normal-hearing and hard-of-hearing groups.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Damien JOLLY

🇫🇷

Reims, France

Damien JOLLY
🇫🇷Reims, France
Xavier DUBERNARD
Contact
03 26 78 71 25
xdubernard@chu-reims.fr
Marc LABROUSSE
Contact
03 26 78 71 25
mlabrousse@chu-reims.fr
© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath