Graeme Clark Collection

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    The histopathological effects of chronic electrical stimulation of the cat cochlea
    Shepherd, R. K. ; Clark, Graeme M. ; Black, R. C. ; Patrick, J. F. (Cambridge University Press, 1983)
    The success of a cochlear implant depends on stimulating an adequate number of viable spiral ganglion cells. The effect of chronic electrical stimulation on ganglion cells is therefore an important consideration when assessing the effectiveness and safety of such a device. The histopathological assessment of chronic unstimulated intracochlear electrodes is now well documented (Simmons, 1967; Clark, 1973; Clark et al, 1975; Schindler and Merzenich, 1974; Schindler, 1976; Schindler et al, 1977; Sutton et al, 1980). These experimental studies have used a variety of electrode designs, materials and surgical techniques. However, all have shown that chronic implantation has little effect on the peripheral nerves and the spiral ganglion cells adjacent to an implant, provided the insertion procedure is free of trauma and infection.
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    Chronic electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve in cats: physiological and histopathological results
    Shepherd, R. K. ; Clark, Graeme M. ; Black, R. C. ( 1983)
    The ability of spiral ganglion cells to survive long-term electrical stimulation is a precondition for the success of cochlear prostheses. In this study 10 cats were implanted bilaterally with bipolar scala tympani electrodes and stimulated for periods of up to 2029 hours using charge balanced biphasic current pulses. The status of the auditory nerve was monitored periodically by recording electrically evoked auditory brainstem responses. At the conclusion of the stimulation program, spiral ganglion cell survival was assessed for stimulated and control cochleas; comparison of the two groups showed no statistically significant difference. The results of this study indicate that long-term intracochlear electrical stimulation using carefully controlled biphasic pulses does not adversely affect the spiral ganglion cell population.
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    Chronic electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve in cats
    Shepherd, R. K. ; Clark, Graeme M. ; Black, R. C. ; Patrick, J. F. ( 1982)
    One requirement for the success of a cochlear hearing prosthesis is that long-term electrical stimulation must not have adverse effects on the residual spiral ganglion cell population. Electrochemically 'safe' stimulation regimes have been defined for the cortex (Brummer &Turner, 1977). However, few investigators have examined the effects of long-term intracochlear electrical stimulation. Walsh et al (1980), stimulating with current densities greater than the 'safe' limits defined by Brummer &Turner (1977), for periods of up to 800 hours at current levels of 4.0-8.0 mA, recorded slight local neural degeneration adjacent to the electrodes.