Chapter 10 — Bone-conduction devices

BAHA, transcutaneous and percutaneous, skull-vibration modes.

A bone-conduction device (BCD) is a small electromechanical transducer that turns acoustic input into mechanical vibration of the skull. The skull conducts the vibration to both cochleae — which, if functioning, respond just as they do to conventional air-conducted sound. The BCD bypasses the outer ear and the middle ear entirely. For patients in whom the conductive apparatus is non-functional (malformed, scarred, infected, surgically absent) but the cochlea is healthy, the BCD provides a route to hearing that no air-conduction hearing aid can match.

This is the book’s shortest chapter — bone-conduction devices serve a small but clinically important population, and the relevant physics is straightforward once the bone-conduction route is understood. Three lessons: