Author Topic: No longer using Transear. Can someone else use it?  (Read 2716 times)

Snoopy-16

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No longer using Transear. Can someone else use it?
« on: July 03, 2015, 06:45:42 am »
I purchased a TransEar 2 years ago (2013), but never really got on with it.
Im now looking at either a BaHa or CI, but my TransEar just sits in a draw, unused.

I was wondering if it could be recycled for someone else to use?

Does anyone know what would be involved in setting it up for someone else?
(and how much it would cost?)

I'm looking forward to your thoughts.

Single sided deafness caused by 'serous labyrinthitis' in 2009, brought on by a simple chest infection.
Tinnitus in dead ear, sounds like compressed air blasting out of an air gun.

CHD63

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Re: No longer using Transear. Can someone else use it?
« Reply #1 on: July 03, 2015, 09:37:11 am »
Hi Snoopy-16 .....

Although I admittedly know nothing about the TransEar system, I do know that my regular Widex air-conducted hearing aid that I used before becoming SSD was retrofitted for my husband to be able to use.  At $3,000 a pop, I was grateful.  His audiologist made a new mold to fit his ear and then re-programmed it for his needs and it has worked well for him.

Hope that info helps.  If you contact your audiologist, you should be able to get information on whether the TransEar can be retrofitted for someone else.

By the way, I love my Oticon Medical Ponto Pro bone-anchored hearing device for my SSD.

Clarice
Right MVD for trigeminal neuralgia, 1994, Pittsburgh, PA
Left retrosigmoid 2.6 cm AN removal, February, 2008, Duke U
Tumor regrew to 1.3 cm in February, 2011
Translab AN removal, May, 2011 at HEI, Friedman & Schwartz
Oticon Ponto Pro abutment implant at same time; processor added August, 2011

leapyrtwins

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Re: No longer using Transear. Can someone else use it?
« Reply #2 on: August 09, 2015, 10:40:59 am »
Doubtful.

I have a BAHA (just updated to the Cochlear BAHA 5) but I know a lot of people who wear a TransEar.

Fit is key when it comes to the TransEar operating well - since it's specifically molded to the inside of your ear.  Without a proper fit it doesn't work well.

They aren't really one size fits all.  The chance of someone else's ear being exactly like yours is slim.

But, it wouldn't hurt to take Clarice's suggestion and ask your audiologist.

Best,

Jan






Retrosig 5/31/07 Drs. Battista & Kazan (Hinsdale, Illinois)
Left AN 3.0 cm (1.5 cm @ diagnosis 6 wks prior) SSD. BAHA implant 3/4/08 (Dr. Battista) Divino 6/4/08  BP100 4/2010 BAHA 5 8/2015

I don't actually "make" trouble..just kind of attract it, fine tune it, and apply it in new and exciting ways