Personalized Medicine in Otolaryngology: Special Topic Otology
A special issue of Journal of Personalized Medicine (ISSN 2075-4426). This special issue belongs to the section "Personalized Therapy and Drug Delivery".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 November 2023) | Viewed by 35050
Special Issue Editors
2. Karl Landsteiner Institute of Implantable Hearing Devices, 3100 St. Poelten, Austria
Interests: otology
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
2. Karl Landsteiner Institute of Implantable Hearing Devices, 3100 St. Poelten, Austria
Interests: otology
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
In collaboration with Journal of Personalized Medicine (IF: 4.945), in my capacity as Guest Editor I am helping to organize a Special Issue entitled “Personalized Medicine in Otolaryngology: Otology”. Globally, more than 1.5 billion people experience some degree of hearing loss. Of these, an estimated 432 million adults and 34 million children suffer from disabling hearing loss, that is, hearing loss of moderate or higher severity in the better hearing ear (WHO World report on hearing 2021). Disabling hearing loss and no benefit from conventional hearing aids are essential indications for implantable hearing systems, and the hearing threshold, the underlying pathology, and the anatomical conditions of the patients dictate the type of hearing implant indicated.
This Special Issue on otology aims to give a broad overview of personalized hearing rehabilitation across all ages and indications (very young children, adults, and very old adults), different applications, as well as necessary rehabilitation options. The title is kept broad to cover all aspects of personalized treatment options and their positive impact on a patient’s quality of life, from auditory brainstem implants to cochlear implants, bone conduction implants, and middle-ear implants.
In the past several decades, the technology behind all the above-mentioned hearing implants has developed immensely. This Special Issue on otology aims to discuss and broadcast some of the recent achievements and even provide a perspective on future developments in hearing technology.
Prof. Dr. Georg Mathias Sprinzl
Dr. Astrid Magele
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- cochlear implants in children, adults and older adults
- active middle-ear implants in children, adults and the elderly
- new indications in otology
- active transcutaneous bone conduction implants in children, adults, and the elderly
- hearing loss and cholesteatoma
- implantable and non-implantable solutions for malformations
- age-related hearing loss
- single-sided deafness
- cochlear implantation
- otitis media
- tinnitus
- quality of life
- burden of hearing loss
- genetics and epigenetics of hearing loss
- robotic surgery
- novel biomarkers for diagnosis and prognosis of hearing loss
- novel intra-operative objective measures for hearing implants
- alternative treatment options to implantable devices
- MRI
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