Home /Research /Robotic Systems for Cochlear Implant Surgeries: A Review of Robotic Design and Clinical Outcomes
SURGICAL

Robotic Systems for Cochlear Implant Surgeries: A Review of Robotic Design and Clinical Outcomes

Oneeba Ahmed, Mingfeng Wang, Bin Zhang, Richard Irving, Philip Begg, Xinli Du

Year
2025
Citations
4
Access
Open access

Abstract

Sensorineural hearing loss occurs when cochlear hair cells fail to convert mechanical sound waves into electrical signals transmitted via the auditory nerve. Cochlear implants (CIs) restore hearing by directly stimulating the auditory nerve with electrical impulses, often while preserving residual hearing. Over the past two decades, robotic-assisted techniques in otologic surgery have gained prominence for improving precision and safety. Robotic systems support critical procedures such as mastoidectomy, cochleostomy drilling, and electrode array (EA) insertion. These technologies aim to minimize trauma and enhance hearing preservation. Despite the outpatient nature of most CI surgeries, surgeons still face challenges, including anatomical complexity, imaging demands, and rising costs. Robotic systems help address these issues by streamlining workflows, reducing variability, and improving electrode placement accuracy. This review evaluates robotic systems developed for cochlear implantation, focusing on their design, surgical integration, and clinical outcomes. This review concludes that robotic systems offer low insertion speed, which leads to reduced insertion forces and lower intracochlear pressure. However, their impact on trauma, long-term hearing preservation, and speech outcome remains uncertain. Further research is needed to assess clinical durability, cost-effectiveness, and patient-reported outcomes.

Keywords

Cochlear implantMedicineCochlear implantationSensorineural hearing lossMastoidectomyHearing lossHearing aidAudiologyComputer scienceSurgery

Related papers

Browse all SURGICAL papers