I have read so many of your comments throughout this forum about the Transear, and would like to make an update about my experience. I received it the first week of January, and have had it reprogramed 2 or 3 times since then, about every 2 weeks, and have had it about 5 weeks now. The audiologist I've worked with has been very accommodating.
I am sad to report that I am unimpressed.
Unlike most of you, I did not have an AN. I lost all hearing suddenly in the span of 10 minutes one day, had an MRI which revealed nothing. My good ear is really good. 18 months later I got the Transear. I was hoping that I would be able to hear as I did before I lost all hearing in that ear (wishful thinking!), but such was not the case. I'm not even sure that it's working properly; it seems to lose contact so that I don't get any help at all. I can close the good ear and hear the "processed" sound, so I know it's functional, but at other times not. But maybe it is doing something, but I still am saying "huh?" a lot. Less than without the Transear? I don't know.
The other thing is that I teach in a classroom that has cement floors, 4 live parallel walls, and open beamed ceilings. Meaning: The acoustics are HORRIBLE! What were the architects thinking?! Many normal hearing teachers have a hard time hearing. Consequently, I am still deciding if the Transear is helping. I would love to report "OMG! This is so great! This is so much better!" It's not.
I really hope that the Transear helps others; I have read so. I also read that the success of the Transear kinda sneaks up on you; that you realize that you prefer to use it rather than not. That may still happen, I hope.
Gosh, this post reads so depressing! Like Eeyore! I'm just trying to be realistic: $2900 is a lot of money.