Sitting on her mother’s lap, a 1-year-old baby girl suddenly turns her head to hear the clicking in a black box next to her — the first sounds she’s ever heard. The child’s serious expression reflects a remarkable moment of discovery.
The parents of Elise Bradshaw, who was born profoundly deaf, shared the moments of discovery after Elise received an innovative procedure called an auditory brain stem implant
Elise was diagnosed with Charge syndrome, a rare birth defect that left her profoundly deaf due to missing auditory nerves. “Her world was smaller, things that were happening left and right weren’t necessarily something she was aware of,” her mother Jill Bradshaw of Texas told TODAY.
Without auditory nerves, Elise wasn’t a candidate for a cochlear implant. But doctors at Massachusetts Eye and Ear in Boston, which had recently become part of an FDA-approved trial, thought the new procedure might help the little girl.
A cochlear implant bypasses nonfunctioning “hair cells” of the cochlea and stimulates the auditory nerve. But an ABI bypasses an absent or damaged cochlea and auditory nerve to directly stimulate a portion of the brain involved in hearing called the cochlear nucleus, Dr. Daniel Lee, director of Massachusetts Eye and Ear’s Pediatric Ear, Hearing and Balance Center, told TODAY.
The device is already being used in adults and has been implanted in older children, but Elise is the youngest patient in the United States to participate in the ongoing trial, a collaboration between Mass General and Eye and Ear, a Harvard Medical School teaching affiliate.
“She is neurologically normal, is age appropriate for her developmental milestones, and has incredibly supportive and dedicated parents who are committed to seeing her succeed with the ABI,” Lee said of the decision to include the child in the trial.
In late March, the girl underwent a right-ear craniotomy surgery and placement of auditory brainstem implant (ABI) at the Massachusetts General Hospital. And then on April 15, the audiology team of surgeons activated the implant for the first time, with Elise’s family recording her reactions on video.
A similar implant was given last year to 3-year-old Grayson Clamp, whose father captured the moment the boy heard his father’s voice for the first time in a video that went viral.
Now Elise can hear noises, although doctors are not sure if she’ll eventually be able to understand spoken word.
“As she becomes older, and with appropriate audiology and speech therapy support, we hope that she will be able to understand patterns of sounds and ultimately, speech,” Lee said. “Her ultimate hearing outcome is not known, however, but she is showing good progress thus far.”
Elise’s parents are hopeful.
“Now some of those dreams, careers and so forth, might be an option,” says Jill Bradshaw. The little girl’s parents say she’ll learn sign language as she grows up and she’ll be part of the hearing world and the deaf community.
Source: today