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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.34 526-533 June 1991.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Changes in Speech Breathing Following Cochlear Implant in Postlingually Deafened Adults

Harlan Lane 1
Joseph Perkell 2
Mario Svirsky 2

Jane Webster 2

1 Department of Otolaryngology Harvard Medical School Boston, MA, and Research Laboratory of Electronics Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA, and Northeastern University Boston, MA
2 Department of Otolaryngology Harvard Medical School Boston, MA, and Research Laboratory of Electronics Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA

Three postlingually deafened adults who received cochlear implants read passages before and after their prostheses were activated while their lung volumes were measured with an Inductive plethysmograph that transduced the cross-sectional areas of the speaker's chest and abdomen. Lung volumes at the initiation and termination of the speakers' expiratory limbs, their average air flow, and the volume of air they expended per syllable were derived from tracings of calibrated lung volume displayed by computer. The activation of the speakers' cochlear prostheses was followed in every case by a significant change in average airflow, which rose for two subjects with initially low flow rates and fell for one subject who had a much higher average preimplant flow rate. These changes in average flow rate were accompanied by corresponding changes in volume of air expended per syllable, statistically reliable in two of the three cases. There were no significant changes in the levels at which speakers initiated their expiratory limbs, but one speaker, after his prosthesis was activated, reliably increased the level of air in his lungs at the end of expiratory limbs to an average value that no longer required him to draw on expiratory reserve volume.

KEY WORDS: speech breathing, cochlear implants, postlingual deafness

Submitted on January 3, 1990
Accepted on August 28, 1990


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