View clinical trials related to Hearing Loss, Conductive.
Filter by:To assess whether children with glue ear ( and some normal hearing controls) and their families find the Hear Glue Ear application acceptable and easy to use. Whether the hearing screening section on the app is comparable to the hearing test data obtained from formal audiology hearing tests.
The study is a prospective, single-center, comparative, cross-over study with within-subject control design. In the investigation an updated sound processor will be tested at compared to the CE marked Ponto 3 SuperPower sound processor (available on the market since December 2016) in order to establish marketing claim(s) on the updated sound processor. The performance of the two sound processors will be evaluated via speech and hearing tests, and patient reported outcomes.
The CochlearTM Osia®2 System was cleared by the Food and Drug Administration November 15, 2019 (K191921) for individuals aged 12 years and older who present with conductive or mixed hearing loss (up to 55 dB HL) or single-sided-deafness (SSD).Published and unpublished data suggest significant pre to postoperative benefit and minimal risk in both children and adults who have received the Osia system. Thus the objective of this study is to examine the safety and effectiveness of the Cochlear Osia 2 system in a group of pediatric subjects aged 5 to 11 years who suffer from conductive or mixed hearing loss (up to 55 dB HL), or single-sided-deafness (SSD) with the intent of expanding the indications for use.
The study is a prospective, multi-center, single arm study The study is part of the Post Market Clinical Follow (PMCF) activity. The investigational device used in this study is the Ponto 4 already fitted to the subjects prior to the study. The device is CE marked and available on the market since June 2019. Treatment is not provided in the study therefore risks are limited to the audiological measurements. The audiological measurements in the study are standard non-invasive measurements already familiar to the clinics. The hearing with Ponto 4 will be evaluated via speech and hearing tests, and patient reported outcomes.
The Bonebridge system using the BCI 601 is marketed since 2012. Previous prospective, multi-center, non-randomized studies on the BCI 601 Bonebridge performed in adult and paediatric populations have shown a significant improvement in terms of aided sound field (SF) thresholds, word recognition scores (WRS), speech reception thresholds (SRT) and subjective device satisfaction. Safety was established by stable residual hearing and low complication rates. The Bonebridge, implanted in over 600 clinics worldwide, is the world's first active transcutaneous bone conduction implant (BCI) system. This study now focuses on the further developed BCI 602 (marketed since 2019) that has the same indication criteria and performance characteristics. The aim of this post-market clinical follow-up (PMCF) study is to provide clinical data for the long-term performance and safety when implanted with the Bonebridge BCI 602 .
To evaluate the clinical efficacy of the Osia 2 system in patients with conductive or mixed conductive hearing loss in a US cohort.
The purpose of this investigation is to evaluate objective outcomes in pediatric bone conduction hearing device (often termed "BAHA") users with and without remote microphone (RM) technology. In this study, two remote microphone technologies will be evaluated to determine benefit in speech understanding in noise.
The aim of this clinical investigation is to investigate the subject´s overall preference, hearing performance and self-reported assessments with the Investigational device and its precursor Sound Processor (Comparator) after 6 weeks in subjects with conductive/mixed hearing loss or Single Sided Deafness, (SSD).
The rationale of this study is to find out the surgical outcome and success rates of tragal cartilage and temporalis fascia, subsequently to develop guide line in light of the results of this study for our department as our institute is going to follow one patient in one bed policy in future. The purpose of this study is to compare the graft success rate of cartilage versus temporalis fascia in tympanoplasty type I in our institute, as no such study has been conducted in our province before.
The objective of the study is to compare the outcomes after a surgical procedure with minimally invasive Ponto surgery (MIPS, test group) and tissue preservation surgery (control) for placing Oticon Medical Ponto implants and abutments.