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Reconnecting After Hearing Loss

The team at the Pacific Neuroscience Institute’s Adult and Pediatric Cochlear Implant Program at Providence Saint John’s, Dr. Courtney Voelker and Dr. Rebecca Lewis, restored Father Timothy McGowans hearing so he could get back to the work he loves. 

When Father Timothy McGowan realized he could no longer hear what parishioners were telling him during confession, he thought to himself, Well, someones prayers are being answered, but not mine!The 72-year-old priest, who had long grappled with fluctuating hearing loss caused by an autoimmune disorder, finally had to admit to himself that even with his hearing aids, he couldnt hear well enough to perform his spiritual duties at the Church of the Visitation in Westchester. 

Making things more difficult, Father Tims hearing loss hit its worst point during the pandemic. It was very isolating,he recalls. I couldnt talk on the phone. I couldnt listen to music or watch TV.The type of hearing loss he experienced is known as sensorineural hearing loss, and it is by far the most common. It affects the inner ear, where the snail shellshaped cochlea translates sound waves into electrical signals that travel via the auditory nerve to the brain. 

Fortunately, Father Tims severe hearing loss was correctible with cochlear implants. Cochlear implants are small devices that contain two parts: an external processor that picks up sound and an internal receiver attached to a wire thats threaded into the cochlea. The systems are Bluetooth-compatible, which means the wearer can receive phone calls, TV audio and external mic sound directly to the receiver. Since they were first approved by the Food and Drug Administration in the 1980s, cochlear implants have become increasingly miniaturized.  

Meeting the Hearing Team 

Neurotologist Courtney Voelker, M.D., Ph.D., and audiologist Rebecca Lewis, Au.D., who make up the team at the Pacific Neuroscience Institutes Adult and Pediatric Cochlear Implant Program at Providence Saint Johns, were the ones who helped Father Tim recover his vocation and more, including riding his motorcycle safely again and traveling abroad for the first time in years. 

After establishing the program, Dr. Voelker performed Providence Saint Johns first cochlear implant in 2022. Dr. Voelker and Dr. Lewis are strong advocates for the procedure in people with significant hearing loss. In infants, the development of language and speech hinges on early exposure to sound, and in older adults, staying connected to the world through hearing staves offor even can reversedementia. We are learning that hearing loss is the number one predictor of cognitive decline. As little as six months of wearing a hearing aid or implant can reverse it,says Dr. Voelker. 

Hearing loss is an invisible disease,adds Dr. Lewis. Its isolating; its depressing. People start to retreat from the world. Treating their hearing loss helps them reengage.According to the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, 25 percent of people aged 65 to 74 experience disabling hearing loss. By age 75, a full 50 percent of people have it. 

Dr. Voelker explains that the two- to three-hour implant procedure is done under general anesthesia and that patients go home the same day. It involves making an incision behind the ear for the receiver and drilling a small hole in the mastoid bone for the wire thats threaded into the cochlea. After a week or more of healing, the patient returns to have the implant activated. 

At that point, the patient works with Dr. Lewis to fine-tune the device and acclimate to it. Its a process,she explains. Its not a quick fix.Thats because the brain has to learn how to interpret this new form of electrical impulse thats coming through the auditory nerve. Some people understand speech immediately, while others hear only indistinct sounds the first day. I love seeing people for the three-week and three-month visits, because we see such dramatic progress,says Dr. Lewis. 

Back to Life 

Father Tim got his first implant in his right ear in November 2022 and his second in the left in May 2023, and he remembers being able to understand speech immediately even with the first one. Im so grateful that I dont feel any hesitation about being able to do my work now,he says. He has returned to serving at Visitation Parish and as chaplain at St. Bernard High School, work he had reluctantly given up. 

He really lit up when he finally could communicate with more confidence,Dr. Lewis recalls. 

To learn more about our cochlear implant program, visit pacificneuro.org/cochlear-implants