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.