The Vibrating Sound Bridge is an implantable hearing aid system that consists of an implant and a speech processor. It is intended for patients with moderate to severe deafness to help restore and improve their hearing. The Vibrating Sound Bridge speech processor consists of a microphone, a digital signal processor and a magnet and battery. It is magnetically attached to both sides of the user’s head. It is used to receive sound, encode it and transmit the signal to the implant. The implant portion of the vibroacoustic bridge needs to be implanted in the body. The implant part consists of three components: the receiving stimulator, the signal lead and the floating mass sensor. The implant receives the signal from the processor and then passes the signal through the signal leads to the floating mass sensor for conversion to vibration. The floating mass transducer is surgically fixed to the auditory chain in the middle ear or placed directly in the round or oval window of the cochlea. By increasing the amplitude of the auditory chain or by bypassing the middle ear structures to transmit vibrations to the inner ear, the patient’s hearing is reestablished. After a patient has a vibrating sound bridge implant, it usually takes about 6-8 weeks to turn on. Surgeons performing cochlear implant surgery must be skilled in tympanic-chain reconstruction and stapes surgery. The relevant instruments involved include: general anesthesia surgical equipment, middle ear surgical instrument kits, and facial nerve detection equipment. Detailed surgical procedures are described in the attached Vibratory Bridge Surgical Guide. The therapeutic effects of vibroacoustic bridges on deaf patients have been widely reported in academic journals and magazines. The largest sample size reported the following results for vibroacoustic bridges: the average improvement in hearing threshold was 28.5 dB in the 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 kHz ranges. Based on these data, it can be concluded that vibro-acoustic bridges are effective in improving the hearing of implant recipients.