RICARDO FERREIRA BENTO

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Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Otorrinolaringologia e Oftalmologia, Faculdade de Medicina - Docente
Instituto Central, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/32 - Laboratório de Otorrinolaringologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Líder

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  • article 13 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cortical maturation in children with cochlear implants: Correlation between electrophysio-logical and behavioral measurement
    (2017) SILVA, Liliane Aparecida Fagundes; COUTO, Maria Ines Vieira; MAGLIARO, Fernanda C. L.; TSUJI, Robinson Koji; BENTO, Ricardo Ferreira; CARVALHO, Ana Claudia Martinho de; MATAS, Carla Gentile
    Central auditory pathway maturation in children depends on auditory sensory stimulation. The objective of the present study was to monitor the cortical maturation of children with cochlear implants using electrophysiological and auditory skills measurements. The study was longitudinal and consisted of 30 subjects, 15 (8 girls and 7 boys) of whom had a cochlear implant, with a mean age at activation time of 36.4 months (minimum, 17 months; maximum, 66 months), and 15 of whom were normal-hearing children who were matched based on gender and chronological age. The auditory and speech skills of the children with cochlear implants were evaluated using GASP, IT-MAIS and MUSS measures. Both groups underwent electrophysiological evaluation using long-latency auditory evoked potentials. Each child was evaluated at three and nine months after cochlear implant activation, with the same time interval adopted for the hearing children. The results showed improvements in auditory and speech skills as measured by IT-MAIS and MUSS. Similarly, the long-latency auditory evoked potential evaluation revealed a decrease in P1 component latency; however, the latency remained significantly longer than that of the hearing children, even after nine months of cochlear implant use. It was observed that a shorter P1 latency corresponded to more evident development of auditory skills. Regarding auditory behavior, it was observed that children who could master the auditory skill of discrimination showed better results in other evaluations, both behavioral and electrophysiological, than those who had mastered only the speech-detection skill. Therefore, cochlear implant auditory stimulation facilitated auditory pathway maturation, which decreased the latency of the P1 component and advanced the development of auditory and speech skills. The analysis of the long-latency auditory evoked potentials revealed that the P1 component was an important biomarker of auditory development during the rehabilitation process.
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Longitudinal Analysis of the Absence of Intraoperative Neural Response Telemetry in Children using Cochlear Implants
    (2014) MOURA, Amanda Christina Gomes de; GOFFI-GOMEZ, Maria Valéria Schmidt; COUTO, Maria Ines Vieira; BRITO, Rubens; TSUJI, Robinson Koji; BEFI-LOPES, Debora Maria; MATAS, Carla Gentile; BENTO, Ricardo Ferreira
    Introduction Currently the cochlear implant allows access to sounds in individuals with profound hearing loss. The objective methods used to verify the integrity of the cochlear device and the electrophysiologic response of users have noted these improvements. Objective To establish whether the evoked compound action potential of the auditory nerve can appear after electrical stimulation when it is absent intraoperatively. Methods The clinical records of children implanted with the Nucleus Freedom (Cochlear Ltd., Australia) (CI24RE) cochlear implant between January 2009 and January 2010 with at least 6 months of use were evaluated. The neural response telemetry (NRT) thresholds of electrodes 1, 6, 11, 16, and 22 during surgery and after at least 3 months of implant use were analyzed and correlated with etiology, length of auditory deprivation, and chronological age. These data were compared between a group of children exhibiting responses in all of the tested electrodes and a group of children who had at least one absent response. Results The sample was composed of clinical records of 51 children. From these, 21% (11) showed no NRT in at least one of the tested electrodes. After an average of 4.9 months of stimulation, the number of individuals exhibiting absent responses decreased from 21 to 11% (n = 6). Conclusion It is feasible that absent responses present after a period of electrical stimulation. In our sample, 45% (n = 5) of the patients with intraoperative absence exhibited a positive response after an average of 4.9 months of continued electrical stimulation.
  • article
    Central Auditory Nervous System Stimulation through the Cochlear Implant Use and Its Behavioral Impacts: A Longitudinal Study of Case Series
    (2021) CAVALCANTI, Marina Isabel; SILVA, Liliane Aparecida Fagundes; GOMEZ, Maria Valeria Schmidt Goffi; KOJI, Tsuji Robinson; BENTO, Ricardo Ferreira; CARVALHO, Ana Claudia Martinho de; GENTILE, Matas Carla
    The purpose of this study was to investigate, over a period of five years, the cortical maturation of the central auditory pathways and its impacts on the auditory and oral language development of children with effective use and without effective use of a Cochlear Implant (CI). A case series study was conducted with seven children who were CI users and seven children with normal hearing, with age- and gender-matched to CI users. The assessment was performed by long-latency auditory evoked potentials and auditory and oral language behavioral protocols. The results pronounced P1 latency decrease in all CI users in the first nine months. Over five years, five children with effective CI use presented decrease or stabilization of P1 latency and a gradual development of auditory and oral language skills, although, for most of the children, the electrophysiological and behavior results remained poor than their hearing peers' results. Two children who stopped the effective use of CI after the first year of activation had worsened auditory and oral language behavioral skills and presented increased P1 latency. A negative correlation was observed between behavioral measures and the P1 latency, the P1 component being considered an important clinical resource capable of measuring the cortical maturation and the behavioral evolution.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cortical maturation in children with cochlear implants: Correlation between electrophysiological and behavioral measurement (vol 12, e0171177, 2017)
    (2017) SILVA, Liliane Aparecida Fagundes; COUTO, Maria Ines Vieira; MAGLIARO, Fernanda C. L.; TSUJI, Robinson Koji; BENTO, Ricardo Ferreira; CARVALHO, Ana Claudia Martinho de; MATAS, Carla Gentile
  • article 4 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Monitoring auditory cortical plasticity in hearing aid users with long latency auditory evoked potentials: a longitudinal study
    (2018) LEITE, Renata Aparecida; MAGLIARO, Fernanda Cristina Leite; RAIMUNDO, Jeziela Cristina; BENTO, Ricardo Ferreira; MATAS, Carla Gentile
    OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to compare long-latency auditory evoked potentials before and after hearing aid fittings in children with sensorineural hearing loss compared with age-matched children with normal hearing. METHODS: Thirty-two subjects of both genders aged 7 to 12 years participated in this study and were divided into two groups as follows: 14 children with normal hearing were assigned to the control group (mean age 9 years and 8 months), and 18 children with mild to moderate symmetrical bilateral sensorineural hearing loss were assigned to the study group (mean age 9 years and 2 months). The children underwent tympanometry, pure tone and speech audiometry and long-latency auditory evoked potential testing with speech and tone burst stimuli. The groups were assessed at three time points. RESULTS: The study group had a lower percentage of positive responses, lower P1-N1 and P2-N2 amplitudes (speech and tone burst), and increased latencies for the P1 and P300 components following the tone burst stimuli. They also showed improvements in long-latency auditory evoked potentials (with regard to both the amplitude and presence of responses) after hearing aid use. CONCLUSIONS: Alterations in the central auditory pathways can be identified using P1-N1 and P2-N2 amplitude components, and the presence of these components increases after a short period of auditory stimulation (hearing aid use). These findings emphasize the importance of using these amplitude components to monitor the neuroplasticity of the central auditory nervous system in hearing aid users.
  • article 8 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Idade no diagnóstico e no início da intervenção de crianças deficientes auditivas em um serviço público de saúde auditiva brasileiro
    (2012) PINTO, Meliane Melina; RAIMUNDO, Jeziela Cristina; SAMELLI, Alessandra Giannella; CARVALHO, Ana Claudia Martinho de; MATAS, Carla Gentile; FERRARI, Gisele Munhoes dos Santos; GARBI, Sérgio; GÂNDARA, Mara; BENTO, Ricardo Ferreira
    INTRODUCTION: The earlier the diagnosis and the intervention from the hearing impairment less will be the impact for the development of cognitive abilities, hearing and of speech from the child. OBJECTIVE: Characterize the age in the diagnosis and the beginning of intervention of the hearing loss and the accompaniment of the assisted children in a public Brazillian hearing health service - Espaço Reouvir from the Clinicas Hospital from the Medical School from the University of São Paulo. METHOD: Retrospective study with information from 166 medical records from children regarding the: gender; etiology, type, degree and laterality of the hearing impairment; age in the diagnosis and adaptation of the Hearing aids (HA) and accompaniment in the service. RESULTS: The sample was composed by 56% men and 44% women. The prevailing etiology was from multifactorial origin. The hearing loss from the neurosensory type occurred in 88,6% of the cases. The degree of moderate hearing loss was the most frequent (30,7%), symmetry in both ears was found in 69,9% of the cases and unilateral hearing loss in 2,4%. The average age in the diagnosis was of 5,46 years and in the intervention was of 6,86 years. A total of 96,98% of children had already completed the process of adaptation and 78,32% still remained in the accompaniment. CONCLUSION: The program Reouvir-HCFMUSP still receives children, both for diagnosis and or intervention in a late manner. However, still is possible the realization of the accompaniment of a significant number of users of the hearing aids, enabling a process of adaptation more effective.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Effect of hearing aids use on speech stimulus decoding through speech-evoked ABR
    (2018) LEITE, Renata Aparecida; MAGLIARO, Fernanda Cristina Leite; RAIMUNDO, Jeziela Cristina; GANDARA, Mara; GARBI, Sergio; BENTO, Ricardo Ferreira; MATAS, Carla Gentile
    Introduction: The electrophysiological responses obtained with the complex auditory brain stem response (cABR) provide objective measures of subcortical processing of speech and other complex stimuli. The cABR has also been used to verify the plasticity in the auditory pathway in the subcortical regions. Objective: To compare the results of cABR obtained in children using hearing aids before and after 9 months of adaptation, as well as to compare the results of these children with those obtained in children with normal hearing. Methods: Fourteen children with normal hearing (Control Group - CG) and 18 children with mild to moderate bilateral sensorineural hearing loss (Study Group - SG), aged 7-12 years, were evaluated. The children were submitted to pure tone and vocal audiometry, acoustic immittance measurements and ABR with speech stimulus, being submitted to the evaluations at three different moments: initial evaluation (MO), 3 months after the initial evaluation (M3) and 9 months after the evaluation (M9); at MO, the children assessed in the study group did not use hearing aids yet. Results: When comparing the CG and the SG, it was observed that the SG had a lower median for the V-A amplitude at MO and M3, lower median for the latency of the component V at M9 and a higher median for the latency of component O at M3 and M9. A reduction in the latency of component A at M9 was observed in the SG. Conclusion: Children with mild to moderate hearing loss showed speech stimulus processing deficits and the main impairment is related to the decoding of the transient portion of this stimulus spectrum. It was demonstrated that the use of hearing aids promoted neuronal plasticity of the Central Auditory Nervous System after an extended time of sensory stimulation. (C) 2016 Associacao Brasileira de Otorrinolaringologia e Cirurgia Cervico-Facial.
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Telephone Usage and Cochlear Implant: Auditory Training Benefits
    (2015) SOUSA, Aline Faria de; CARVALHO, Ana Claudia Martinho de; COUTO, Maria Ines Vieira; TSUJI, Robinson Koji; GOFFI-GOMEZ, Maria Valéria Schmidt; BENTO, Ricardo Ferreira; MATAS, Carla Gentile; BEFI-LOPES, Debora Maria
    Introduction: Difficulties with telephone use by adult users of cochlear implants (CIs) are reported as a limitation in daily life. Studies to improve the speech understanding of CI users on the telephone are scarce in the Brazilian scientific literature. Objective To develop and evaluate the effectiveness of a training program of auditory abilities on the telephone for an adult CI user. Resumed Report The subject was a 55-year-old woman with a degree in accounting who used a CI for 24 months. The program consisted of three stages: pretraining evaluation, eight sessions of advanced auditory abilities training, and post-training evaluation. Auditory abilities with CI were evaluated before and after training in three conditions: sound field, telephone with the speech processor in the microphone function, and telephone with the speech processor in the telecoil function. Speech recognition was assessed by three different lists: one with monosyllabic and dissyllabic words, another with nonsense syllables, and another one with sentences. The Client Oriented Scale of Improvement (COSI) was used to assess whether the needs established by the CI user in everyday telephone use situations improved after training. The auditory abilities training resulted in a relevant improvement in the percentage of correct answers in speech tests both in the telephone use conditions and in the sound field condition. Conclusion The results obtained with the COSI inventory indicated a performance improvement in all situations presented at the beginning of the program.
  • article
    Auditory Cortical Maturation in a Child with Cochlear Implant: Analysis of Electrophysiological and Behavioral Measures
    (2015) SILVA, Liliane Aparecida Fagundes; COUTO, Maria Ines Vieira; TSUJI, Robinson Koji; BENTO, Ricardo Ferreira; CARVALHO, Ana Claudia Martinho de; MATAS, Carla Gentile
    The purpose of this study was to longitudinally assess the behavioral and electrophysiological hearing changes of a girl inserted in a CI program, who had bilateral profound sensorineural hearing loss and underwent surgery of cochlear implantation with electrode activation at 21 months of age. She was evaluated using the P1 component of Long Latency Auditory Evoked Potential (LLAEP); speech perception tests of the Glendonald Auditory Screening Procedure (GASP); Infant Toddler Meaningful Auditory Integration Scale (IT-MAIS); and Meaningful Use of Speech Scales (MUSS). The study was conducted prior to activation and after three, nine, and 18 months of cochlear implant activation. The results of the LLAEP were compared with data from a hearing child matched by gender and chronological age. The results of the LLAEP of the child with cochlear implant showed gradual decrease in latency of the P1 component after auditory stimulation (172 ms-134 ms). In the GASP, IT-MAIS, and MUSS, gradual development of listening skills and oral language was observed. The values of the LLAEP of the hearing child were expected for chronological age (132ms128ms). The use of different clinical instruments allow a better understanding of the auditory habilitation and rehabilitation process via CI.
  • article 10 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Auditory pathways' maturation after cochlear implant via cortical auditory evoked potentials
    (2014) SILVA, Liliane Aparecida Fagundes; COUTO, Maria Ines Vieira; TSUJI, Robinson Koji; BENTO, Ricardo Ferreira; MATAS, Carla Gentile; CARVALHO, Ana Claudia Martinho de
    Introduction: Evaluation of cortical auditory evoked potentials in children with cochlear implants has been proven to be an effective method for assessing cortical maturation after electrical stimulation. Objective: To analyze the changes in latency values of cortical auditory evoked potentials before and three months after cochlear implant use. Material and methods: This was a case-control study with a group of five children using cochlear implant awaiting activation of the electrodes, and a control group composed of five normal-hearing children. Auditory electrophysiological assessment was performed by the testing of the cortical auditory evoked potentials at two different periods: prior to cochlear implant activation and after three months of cochlear implant use. Results: A significant decrease in the latency time of the P1 component was observed after three months of stimulation via cochlear implant, whose values were higher than those from the control group. The younger the child was at electrode activation, the greater the reduction in latency of the P1 component. Conclusion: Changes in the characteristics of cortical auditory evoked potentials can be observed in children who receive cochlear implants; these changes are related to the age of intervention, suggesting a rapid maturation of the auditory pathways after electrical stimulation.