He Can Hear A Whisper - Eli Thurman's Story
When
Eli Thurman of Conway, who was born deaf, underwent surgery at St.
John’s three years ago to receive a cochlear implant, his parents
hoped he might gain enough hearing from the device to protect
himself from danger.
“He can hear a
whisper,” says his mom, Stacy. “The implant gave him so much more
than we expected.”
At 2, Eli was the
first cochlear implant recipient in Springfield. St. John’s
otolaryngologist
(ear, nose and throat specialist) Scott Estrem, M.D., who has been
performing cochlear implants since 1987, performed Eli’s surgery in
2000.
“I have to admit it
was scary, Eli being the first implant patient in the area, but it
would have been scary regardless,” Stacy says. “I think the staff at
St. John’s Clinic - Ear, Nose & Throat went above and beyond to make
sure that everything was …” “Perfect,” says Eli’s dad, Greg,
finishing his wife’s sentence. Stacy nods her head in agreement.
The quarter-sized
device, which takes about three hours to surgically implant in the
skin behind the ear, is an advanced electronic device with a soft
electrode array that is threaded into the spiral-shaped inner ear,
or cochlea. The electrodes send impulses directly to the nerve
fibers in the cochlea. The external components of the implant
include a headpiece and a sound processor. The small headpiece
contains the system’s microphone. Eli wears a miniature version,
which looks like a traditional hearing aid, behind his ear. The
sound processor converts speech and other sounds into electrical
signals, which travel through the skin by radio waves to the
implant, then to the inner ear and on to the brain where they are
interpreted as sound.
Patients
must wait 30 days after cochlear-implant surgery to allow the
swelling to subside before the device can be activated. The patient
then meets with the audiologist who programs the sound processor and
instructs the patient and family members how to program it.
The Thurmans
remember every detail about the day Eli heard for the first time.
“We were all
in a small room with Stacy’s mom and (St. John’s audiologist) Lisa (Geier,
Ph.D.) Lisa was holding up a picture of a dog and barking and asked
him to bark, too. Eli barked, so we knew that he was hearing. It was
kind of a tear-jerker moment,” Greg says.
After
the implant was turned on, Eli visited St. John’s Clinic - Ear, Nose
& Throat weekly for hearing tests until Geier felt the implant’s
program was adjusted properly. He then began making monthly visits
and now comes in about every six months. Eli occasionally uses sign
language to communicate if the batteries are low in his sound
processor or if he doesn’t have it on.
“He doesn’t wear
the headpiece and sound processor to bed, but they go on first thing
in the morning,” Stacy says.
Eli receives speech
therapy at school. When other kids ask about his implant, he says
“it makes my ears work.”
“He fits in with
the other kids and is well liked. This really hasn’t seemed to have
affected him socially,” Stacy says.
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