References
Audiological Aspects
No binaural hearing
1. "(...) rerouting of signal does not result in restoration of binaural function, but serves to reduce the head-shadow effect." (Snapp et al. 2017)
2. "The biggest limitation of CROS and BiCROS solutions is that binaural hearing is not restored. [...] These devices cannot resolve an individual's impairment for complex auditory tasks heavily reliant on binaural cues provided through binaural hearing, such as binaural summation, binaural squelch, or localization of sounds" (Snapp et al., 2019)
3. "The CROS and bone-anchored hearing aid treatment [...] do not allow for real binaural hearing because the brain only receives and processes auditory input from one side." (Arndt et al. 2011)
More: Bishop et al. 2010, Arndt et al. 2017, Peters et al. 2015
Audiological Aspects
No benefit for tinnitus
1. "Bone-anchored hearing aid (BAHA) or contralateral routing of signal (CROS) can improve the head shadow effect but do usually not reduce the perception of tinnitus. " (Peter et al.2019)
2. "However, for people with severe to profound sensorineural hearing loss, hearing aids and other forms of sound enrichment are not useful for tinnitus treatment. In recent years, patients with severe to profound hearing loss have sought cochlear implantation as a means of tinnitus relief when other treatments were found to be ineffective." (Holder et al. 2017)
Audiological Aspects
No localization
1. "There was no improvement in localization ability in the aided condition and no significant difference in performance with
CROS versus bone-anchored implants (BAI). " (Snapp et al.2017)
2. "CROS solutions do not provide restoration of binaural hearing and cannot improve tasks requiring binaural input, such as localization." (Snapp 2019)
More: Arndt et al. 2011, 2017, Cho et al. 2020, Augustine et al. 2012, Niparko et al. 2003, Hol et al. 2004, 2009, Peters et al. 2015
Audiological Aspects
Noise on HA side can decrease benefit in good ear
1. "[Speech reception thresholds) were also impaired significantly by both [air conduction and bone conduction rerouting] device types when noise was presented toward the impaired ear. " (Kitterick et al. 2016)
More: Arndt et al. 2011, 2017, Finbow et al. 2015, Snapp et al.2017
Patient-reported Aspects
Occlusion of both ears
1. "Most patients found it unpleasant to have an earmold with partial occlusion in their hearing ear (...)" (Müller-Isberner et al. 2015)
