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Dive into the research topics where Rolien Free is active.

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Featured researches published by Rolien Free.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2000

Effect of probiotic bacteria on prevalence of yeasts in oropharyngeal biofilms on silicone rubber voice prostheses in vitro.

van der Henny C. Mei; Rolien Free; Gj Elving; R Van Weissenbruch; Fwj Albers; Henk J. Busscher

The proliferation of yeasts in the mixed bacterial and fungal biofilms colonising silicone rubber voice prostheses in laryngectomised patients is the main cause of malfunctioning of the valve mechanism on the oesophageal side of the prostheses. Indwelling voice prostheses usually have to be replaced every 3-4 months. The consumption of probiotic bacteria is largely motivated by health claims related to the urogenital and lower digestive tract, but not to the upper digestive tract. The present study examined the influence of probiotic bacteria on the prevalence of yeasts in oropharyngeal biofilms on silicone rubber voice prostheses, as formed in a modified Robbins device. Exposure of oropharyngeal biofilms on voice prostheses to suspensions of Bifidobacterium infantis 420 or Enterococcus faecium 603 did not significantly reduce the number of yeasts in the biofilm. However, suspensions of Lactobacillus fermentum B54, L. rhamnosus 744 or L. lactis cremoris SK11 led to a reduction in the number of yeasts harvested from the voice prostheses. Suspensions of L. casei Shirota and Streptococcus thermophilus B significantly reduced the number of yeasts in the biofilm to 39% and 33%, respectively. The reduction brought about in yeast prevalence in the mixed biofilm was greatest by exposure to a suspension of L. lactis 53, with yeast prevalence only 4% of the control. In conclusion, the study demonstrated that the prevalence of yeasts in oropharyngeal biofilms on silicone rubber voice prostheses might be controlled by consumption of probiotic bacteria.


Otology & Neurotology | 2013

The Role of Subtotal Petrosectomy in Cochlear Implant Surgery-A Report of 32 Cases and Review on Indications

Rolien Free; Maurizio Falcioni; Giuseppe Di Trapani; Anna Lisa Giannuzzi; Alessandra Russo; Mario Sanna

Objective To report and review 32 cases of subtotal petrosectomy (SP) in cochlear implant (CI) surgery and to define the indications and contraindications for this procedure Study Design Retrospective case review + case reports. Setting Tertiary skull base center. Patients Cochlear implant database: 32 subtotal petrosectomies in 31 patients. Interventions Subtotal petrosectomy with blind sac closure of the external auditory canal, closure of Eustachian tube, and abdominal fat obliteration in combination with cochlear implantation. Results Indications for SP in CI surgery were as follows: chronic otitis media (n = 4), previous radical cavity (n = 13), previous subtotal petrosectomy (n = 4), ossification of the cochlea (n = 5), malformation of the inner ear (n = 2), and temporal bone fracture (n = 4). One patient was simultaneously bilaterally implanted; 2 cases were revisions. All procedures were performed in 1 stage. In 2 cases, complications were encountered (6%), one of which lead to reoperation (3%). None of the patients was explanted. Conclusion Subtotal petrosectomy combined with cochlear implantation is a procedure required in specific situations and lowers the risk of repetitive ear infections, CSF leakage, and meningitis by closing off all connection with the external environment. Additionally, it gives excellent visibility and access in difficult anatomy or in drill-out procedures. The complication rate of 6% is comparable with normal cochlear implantation. Preservation of residual hearing can be considered the only absolute contraindication as an open external meatus is necessary for use of electroacoustic stimulation. Risks of the SP+CI procedure are infection of the abdominal fat, breakdown of the blind sac closure, and entrapped cholesteatoma. Follow-up with CT imaging is therefore mandatory.


I-perception | 2015

Normal-Hearing Listeners’ and Cochlear Implant Users’ Perception of Pitch Cues in Emotional Speech

Steven Gilbers; Christina Fuller; Dicky Gilbers; Mirjam Broersma; Martijn Goudbeek; Rolien Free; Deniz Başkent

In cochlear implants (CIs), acoustic speech cues, especially for pitch, are delivered in a degraded form. This study’s aim is to assess whether due to degraded pitch cues, normal-hearing listeners and CI users employ different perceptual strategies to recognize vocal emotions, and, if so, how these differ. Voice actors were recorded pronouncing a nonce word in four different emotions: anger, sadness, joy, and relief. These recordings’ pitch cues were phonetically analyzed. The recordings were used to test 20 normal-hearing listeners’ and 20 CI users’ emotion recognition. In congruence with previous studies, high-arousal emotions had a higher mean pitch, wider pitch range, and more dominant pitches than low-arousal emotions. Regarding pitch, speakers did not differentiate emotions based on valence but on arousal. Normal-hearing listeners outperformed CI users in emotion recognition, even when presented with CI simulated stimuli. However, only normal-hearing listeners recognized one particular actor’s emotions worse than the other actors’. The groups behaved differently when presented with similar input, showing that they had to employ differing strategies. Considering the respective speaker’s deviating pronunciation, it appears that for normal-hearing listeners, mean pitch is a more salient cue than pitch range, whereas CI users are biased toward pitch range cues.


Jaro-journal of The Association for Research in Otolaryngology | 2014

Gender Categorization Is Abnormal in Cochlear Implant Users

Christina Fuller; Etienne Gaudrain; Jeanne Clarke; John J. Galvin; Qian-Jie Fu; Rolien Free; Deniz Başkent

In normal hearing (NH), the perception of the gender of a speaker is strongly affected by two anatomically related vocal characteristics: the fundamental frequency (F0), related to vocal pitch, and the vocal tract length (VTL), related to the height of the speaker. Previous studies on gender categorization in cochlear implant (CI) users found that performance was variable, with few CI users performing at the level of NH listeners. Data collected with recorded speech produced by multiple talkers suggests that CI users might rely more on F0 and less on VTL than NH listeners. However, because VTL cannot be accurately estimated from recordings, it is difficult to know how VTL contributes to gender categorization. In the present study, speech was synthesized to systematically vary F0, VTL, or both. Gender categorization was measured in CI users, as well as in NH participants listening to unprocessed (only synthesized) and vocoded (and synthesized) speech. Perceptual weights for F0 and VTL were derived from the performance data. With unprocessed speech, NH listeners used both cues (normalized perceptual weight: F0 = 3.76, VTL = 5.56). With vocoded speech, NH listeners still made use of both cues but less efficiently (normalized perceptual weight: F0 = 1.68, VTL = 0.63). CI users relied almost exclusively on F0 while VTL perception was profoundly impaired (normalized perceptual weight: F0 = 6.88, VTL = 0.59). As a result, CI users’ gender categorization was abnormal compared to NH listeners. Future CI signal processing should aim to improve the transmission of both F0 cues and VTL cues, as a normal gender categorization may benefit speech understanding in competing talker situations.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2014

The musician effect: does it persist under degraded pitch conditions of cochlear implant simulations?

Christina Fuller; John J. Galvin; Bert Maat; Rolien Free; Deniz Başkent

Cochlear implants (CIs) are auditory prostheses that restore hearing via electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve. Compared to normal acoustic hearing, sounds transmitted through the CI are spectro-temporally degraded, causing difficulties in challenging listening tasks such as speech intelligibility in noise and perception of music. In normal hearing (NH), musicians have been shown to better perform than non-musicians in auditory processing and perception, especially for challenging listening tasks. This “musician effect” was attributed to better processing of pitch cues, as well as better overall auditory cognitive functioning in musicians. Does the musician effect persist when pitch cues are degraded, as it would be in signals transmitted through a CI? To answer this question, NH musicians and non-musicians were tested while listening to unprocessed signals or to signals processed by an acoustic CI simulation. The task increasingly depended on pitch perception: (1) speech intelligibility (words and sentences) in quiet or in noise, (2) vocal emotion identification, and (3) melodic contour identification (MCI). For speech perception, there was no musician effect with the unprocessed stimuli, and a small musician effect only for word identification in one noise condition, in the CI simulation. For emotion identification, there was a small musician effect for both. For MCI, there was a large musician effect for both. Overall, the effect was stronger as the importance of pitch in the listening task increased. This suggests that the musician effect may be more rooted in pitch perception, rather than in a global advantage in cognitive processing (in which musicians would have performed better in all tasks). The results further suggest that musical training before (and possibly after) implantation might offer some advantage in pitch processing that could partially benefit speech perception, and more strongly emotion and music perception.


Annals of Otology, Rhinology, and Laryngology | 2001

Biofilm Formation on Voice Prostheses: In vitro Influence of Probiotics

Rolien Free; G. Jolanda Elving; Ranny van Weissenbruch; Henk J. Busscher; Henny C. van der Mei; Frans W. J. Albers

In order to determine the influence of probiotic bacteria on biofilm formation on Groningen and Provox 2 voice prostheses in an artificial throat, we grew biofilms on both types of voice prostheses and exposed them 3 times daily to a probiotic bacterial suspension. As a control, we perfused an artificial throat with phosphate-buffered saline solution. Perfusion with Lactococcus lactis 53 suspension reduced the percentage numbers of bacteria and yeasts, respectively, on the Groningen prostheses to 17% and 22% and on the Provox 2 prostheses to 19% and 45%, compared to the number of colony-forming units on the control prosthesis, which was set at 100%. A suspension of Streptococcus thermophilus b reduced the percentage numbers of bacteria and yeasts, respectively, on the Groningen prostheses to 53% and 33% and on the Provox 2 prostheses to 14% and 0%, as compared to the control prosthesis. All other probiotic strains tested caused some reduction in the percentages of bacteria or yeasts, but strong differences between the types of prostheses were observed. In conclusion, L lactis 53 and S thermophilus b strongly reduce the occurrence of yeasts and bacteria in voice prosthetic biofilms.


Otology & Neurotology | 2011

Contralateral Suppression of Otoacoustic Emissions in Tinnitus Patients

Leontien I. Geven; Emile de Kleine; Rolien Free; Pim van Dijk

Objective: To compare the functioning of the medial olivocochlear efferent system between tinnitus patients and control subjects. Study Design: Prospective, nonrandomized controlled analysis of suppression of otoacoustic emissions with contralateral acoustic stimulation. Setting: Tertiary referral center. Patients: Initial analysis of 97 tinnitus patients and 44 control subjects with click-evoked otoacoustic emission measurement. If subjects had reproducible otoacoustic emissions at 80 dB SPL, suppression of otoacoustic emission with contralateral acoustic stimulation was measured with a 65-dB click stimulus. This resulted in inclusion of 44 ears of tinnitus patients and 57 ears of control subjects. Intervention: Suppression of the otoacoustic emissions generated by the 65-dB click stimulus was tested using contralateral broadband noise at 70 dB SPL. Suppression was calculated in half-octave frequency bands centered at 1.0, 1.4, 2.0, 2.8, and 4.0 kHz. Main Outcome Measure: The amount of suppression of the OAE, calculated in half-octave frequency bands. Results: Otoacoustic emission amplitudes were equal in both groups. Contralateral suppression of the signal was found in both patients and controls. The amount of suppression was equal, except for the 2.0- and 2.8-kHz frequency bands in the right ear (p value of 0.03, 0.008, respectively), for which the patients had less suppression. Conclusion: The suppression of otoacoustic emissions with CAS seems equally effective in tinnitus patients and healthy controls. The minor differences between both groups suggest subtle differences in the function of the medial olivocochlear efferent system.


Acta Oto-laryngologica | 2000

Biofilm formation on voice prostheses: influence of dairy products in vitro.

Rolien Free; Henny C. van der Mei; F Dijk; Ranny van Weissenbruch; Henk J. Busscher; Frans W. J. Albers

Laryngectomized patients use silicone rubber voice prostheses to regain their speech; however, the lifetime of these devices is limited due to biofilm formation. Following anecdotal evidence, the influence of various dairy products on biofilm formation on voice prostheses was studied, using the artificial throat-model. Biofilms were grown on Groningen and Provox®2 voice prostheses by inoculating two artificial throats with the total microflora isolated from an explanted Groningen voice prosthesis. After 3 days, one throat was perfused three times daily with 650 ml dairy product; the other was perfused with phosphate buffered saline, used as a control. After 12 days the microflora on each voice prosthesis was determined. Perfusion of the artificial throat with buttermilk three times daily for 9 days reduced the amount of bacteria and yeasts in the biofilm on Groningen voice prostheses to 3% and 15% of the control, respectively. These effects were not observed with a pasteurized conservable buttermilk product. Yakult fermented milk drink, Mona mild yoghurt, Mona vifit yoghurt, semi-skimmed milk and low-fat yoghurt reduced the amount of bacteria by various degrees, ranging from 12% (Yakult) to 88% (Mona mild) of the control, but these products did not inhibit, and sometimes even stimulated, yeast growth. A combination of buttermilk and Yakult did not show a synergistic effect, as expected. Effects for the Provox®2 voice prosthesis were less pronounced. These in vitro experiments in the artificial throat demonstrated that the formation of the biofilm on voice prostheses can be lessened by the daily use of certain dairy products, of which buttermilk had the strongest inhibitory effect, followed by Yakult.Laryngectomized patients use silicone rubber voice prostheses to regain their speech, however, the lifetime of these devices is limited due to biofilm formation. Following anecdotal evidence, the influence of various dairy products on biofilm formation on voice prostheses was studied, using the artificial throat-model. Biofilms were grown on Groningen and Provox2 voice prostheses by inoculating two artificial throats with the total microflora isolated from an explanted Groningen voice prosthesis. After 3 days, one throat was perfused three times daily with 650 ml dairy product; the other was perfused with phosphate buffered saline, used as a control. After 12 days the microflora on each voice prosthesis was determined. Perfusion of the artificial throat with buttermilk three times daily for 9 days reduced the amount of bacteria and yeasts in the biofilm on Groningen voice prostheses to 3% and 15% of the control, respectively. These effects were not observed with a pasteurized conservable buttermilk product. Yakult fermented milk drink, Mona mild yoghurt, Mona vifit yoghurt, semi-skimmed milk and low-fat yoghurt reduced the amount of bacteria by various degrees, ranging from 12% (Yakult) to 88% (Mona mild) of the control, but these products did not inhibit, and sometimes even stimulated, yeast growth. A combination of buttermilk and Yakult did not show a synergistic effect, as expected. Effects for the Provox2 voice prosthesis were less pronounced. These in vitro experiments in the artificial throat demonstrated that the formation of the biofilm on voice prostheses can be lessened by the daily use of certain dairy products, of which buttermilk had the strongest inhibitory effect, followed by Yakult.


Clinical Genetics | 2010

Death in CHARGE syndrome after the neonatal period

Jorieke E. H. Bergman; Kim Blake; Marian K. Bakker; G. J. du Marchie Sarvaas; Rolien Free; C.M.A. van Ravenswaaij-Arts

Bergman JEH, Blake KD, Bakker MK, du Marchie Sarvaas GJ, Free RH, van Ravenswaaij‐Arts CMA. Death in CHARGE syndrome after the neonatal period.


Otology & Neurotology | 2013

Music and quality of life in early-deafened late-implanted adult cochlear implant users.

Christina Fuller; Lisa Mallinckrodt; Bert Maat; Deniz Başkent; Rolien Free

Hypothesis and Background The early-deafened, late-implanted (EDLI) CI users constitute a relatively new and understudied clinical population. To contribute to a better understanding of the implantation outcome, this study evaluated this population for self-reported enjoyment and perception of music. Additionally, correlations of these measures with the self-reported quality of life and everyday hearing ability and a behaviorally measured word recognition test were explored. Materials and Methods EDLI CI users from the Northern Netherlands were sent 4 questionnaires: 1) Dutch Musical Background Questionnaire (enjoyment and perception of music), 2) Nijmegen Cochlear Implant Questionnaire (quality of life), 3) Cochlear Implant Functioning Index (auditory-related functioning), and 4) Speech, Spatial and Qualities of Hearing Scale (hearing ability). Complementary, behavioral word recognition in quiet tests (phoneme score) were completed. Results Twelve (60%) of 20 participants reported music to sound pleasant. In general, the self-perceived quality of music was scored positively. No correlations were observed between enjoyment and perception of music, quality of life, hearing ability, and word recognition. Conclusion The results indicate that, differently than postlingually deafened, EDLI CI users enjoy music and rate the quality of music positively. Potential explanations for the absence of correlations between the music measures and the other outcomes could be that other factors, such as speech perception, contribute more to quality of life of EDLI CI users or that this group simply lacks previous exposure to music with acoustic hearing. Overall, these positive findings may give extra support for implant candidacy of early-deafened individuals, but further studies should be conducted.

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Paul Merkus

VU University Amsterdam

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Johan H. M. Frijns

Leiden University Medical Center

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Bert Maat

University Medical Center Groningen

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Deniz Başkent

University Medical Center Groningen

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Henk J. Busscher

University Medical Center Groningen

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