The Experience of Adult-Onset Hearing Loss and Adaptation to a Cochlear Implant
Bruce H. Dobkin

TL;DR
This paper describes the author's experience with adult-onset hearing loss and recovery after receiving a cochlear implant.
Contribution
A personal case study on adaptation to a cochlear implant and auditory rehabilitation in an adult with progressive hearing loss.
Findings
The author's hearing accuracy improved from 10% to 65% over 8 months of auditory rehabilitation.
Auditory rehabilitation enabled re-engagement in daily roles after 18 months.
Cochlear implants can help restore functional communication through neuroplasticity.
Abstract
Spoken language and environmental sounds hold rich and nuanced meaning for the listener, but depend on accurate hearing of the soundscape, including the timing, volume, and contrasts of its component pitches. Sensorineural hearing loss with aging degrades these properties, leading to progressive disability. This case study and review describe my experience and behavioral accommodations to progressive bilateral hearing loss, limited compensation with hearing aids, and the stuttering evolution of gains after a unilateral cochlear implant (CI). Despite increasingly powerful hearing aids over 25 years, spoken phonemes and words became increasingly muffled, misheard, and often dissipated into ambient background noise. The cognitive effort to extract meaning and mask my disability grew exhausting. I gradually eliminated many of my usual family, medical career, and social roles. To try to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHearing Loss and Rehabilitation · Noise Effects and Management · Hearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics
