Title: AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS
1AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS
- Dr. Juan Mora
- (Consultant Audiological Physician)
- and Paediatric Audiology Team
- (Yorkhill Hospital, Glasgow)
- October 2007
2AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS
- (Referring to permanent hearing loss)
- Congenital versus Acquired
- 1)Congenital Genetic or pre-natally acquired
- Genetic Around 50 of all permanent hearing
losses 70 autosomal recessive, 25 autosomal
dominant and 5 X-linked. - 70 non-syndromal and 30 syndromal.
- Pre-natally acquired Cytomegalovirus, Rubella,
Toxoplasma, Syphilis, Herpes .. - 2)Acquired (peri or post-natally) Meningitis,
Hyperbilirrubinemia, Ototoxic treatments (e.g.
Platin compounds, Aminoglycosides), Head injury
3AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS - AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE
- USHER SYNDROME 3 Subtypes
- Retinal dystrophy nyctalopia
- tunnel vision
- pigmentary retinopathy
-
- SNHL
-
- Vestibular abnormalities
4AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS - AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE
- USHER Type I (several subtypes)
- Commonest (50-70)
- Estimated 3-8 of profoundly deaf children and
50 of deaf-blind population - Profound congenital hearing loss
- Onset visual symptoms in 1st decade
- Vestibular dysfunction (late walkers!)
5AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS - AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE
- USHER Type II (there are subtypes)
- Moderate to severe SNHL
- - detected during childhood
- Later onset visual symptoms
- - 2nd or 3rd decades
- Normal vestibular function
6AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS - AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE
- USHER Type III
- Progressive SNHL of late onset
- Late onset progressive retinitis pigmentosa
- Vestibular function may be impaired
- (Type III is the least common but in the Finnish
population)
7AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS - AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE
- Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome
- (long QTc syndrome)
- Request ECG in bilateral severe and profound SNHL
- UNHS babies Request the ECG after 3/12 of age
- Hearing loss can be progressive in the first
years of life
A young girl was called before the director of
her school for a minor offense and fell
instantly dead. The parents were not surprised,
having lost 2 other 'deaf-mute' children under
similar circumstances of fright and rage
Apparent case of this syndrome described by
Meissner (1856)
8AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE
- Mutations in Connexin 26 (GJB2)
- Deletions Connexin 30 (GJB6)
- Leading cause of Autosomal recessive non
syndromic hearing loss - Congenital severe to profound hearing loss
- Missense mutations may cause moderate hearing
loss (which possible progression)
9AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE
- PENDRED syndrome
- Enlarged thyroid gland associated with SNHL
- Gene mapped to 7q31
- Bilateral SNHL, ranging from moderate to
profound, which may progress - Vestibular dysfunction not uncommon
- Thyroid enlargement of onset during childhood
- Imaging Mondini anomaly, Wide Vestibular
Aqueduct - (Estimated in 5-10 of children in Schools for
the Deaf)
10AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT
- BRANCHIO-OTO-RENAL SYNDROME
- Ears from severe microtia to minor anomalies of
the pinna (cup ears), pre-auricular pits,
hearing loss (mixed, conductive or SNHL). - Imaging Wide vestibular aqueducts.
- Branchial clefts cysts, sinuses, fistulas
usually bilateral lower 1/3 of the neck, medial
to sternomastoid muscle. - Renal system different structural renal
anomalies.
11AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT
- WAARDENBURG syndrome
- (types I, IIA, IIB, IIC, IID, III, IV Aut. Rec.
) - Wide nasal bridge owing to lateral displacement
of the inner canthus of each eye, - Pigmentary disturbance (heterochromia irides,
white forelock, white eye lashes) - SNHL
12AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT
- Waardenburg type I dystopia canthorum present
- Waardenburg type II dystopia canthorum absent
- (the most frequent type)
- Waardenburg type III upper limb defects
- Waardenburg type IV Hirschprung disease
- Type IV is autosomal recessive
13AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT
- WAARDENBURG syndrome
- Sensorineural hearing losses of different
configurations, generally severe but can be
unilateral. Vestibular function may be impaired.
14AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT
- VELO-CARDIO-FACIAL SYNDROME
- (Also DiGeorge sequence)
- Estimated prevalence of 12000 people with a
higher birth incidence as some babies do not
survive the neonatal period - Chromosomal deletion from long arm of chromosome
22 (22q11) - Extensive phenotype
15AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT
- VELO-CARDIO-FACIAL SYNDROME
- Hearing Conductive, mixed and SNHL. If SNHL
generally unilateral and mild to moderate. - Major systems affected Heart, vascular, CNS,
craniofacial, skeletal, renal, immune, metabolic,
cognitive, digestive, respiratory.. - Characteristic face vertically long face,
pear-shaped nose, overfolded helices - plus small hands with tapered digits
16AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT
- Up to 25 of congenitally profound losses may be
autosomal dominant. The majority are
Non-syndromal. - Late-onset progressive SNHL is a feature of
dominant inheritance (and early onset of
recessive cases).
17AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT
- TREACHER COLLINS syndrome
- (Francheschetti-Klein synd., Mandibulofacial
dysostosis) - Relatively rare (110,000) but distinctive
appearance - Microtia, generally bilateral and symmetric,
absence of eyelashes on the inner third of the
lower eyelid. - CONDUCTIVE hearing loss
18AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS X - LINKED
- ALPORT SYNDROME
- Glomerulonephritis (renal function deteriorates)
presents with haematuria - Progressive SNHL of onset between 5-10 years
- Eyes anterior lenticonus progressing to
cataracts - (Commonest variety is X-linked, the remainder
generally autosomal recessive)
19AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS
- CONGENITAL CYTOMEGALOVIRUS CMV INFECTION
- CMV cultured from blood, urine or throat lt 3
weeks indicates a congenital infection - SNHL of different configurations Often
Progressive or fluctuating - Risk of late onset and progression follow up
until 6 years
20AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS
- CONGENITAL CYTOMEGALOVIRUS CMV INFECTION
- 10 Symptomatic (of which 50 develop SNHL)
- 90 Asymptomatic (of which 7-15 develop SNHL)
- It may be missed by NHSP
- Consider Congenital CMV in unexplained SNHL,
including unilateral cases - (Can be diagnosed via access to Guthrie cards)
21AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS CASE STUDY
- Congenital cytomegalovirus infection with
associated cerebral palsy - Targeted newborn hearing screening REFER
(otoacoustic emissions) but normal results on
Click Auditory Brainstem Responses in Left Ear
and Borderline in Right Ear (at 7 weeks of age) - Surveillance arranged
22(No Transcript)
23AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS CASE STUDY
24AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS CASE STUDY
- INSERT VISUAL REINFORCEMENT AUDIOMETRY
-
- Â .5 kHz 1 kHz 2 kHz 3 kHz 4 kHz
- Left ear 50 55 40 45 35
- Right ear NR NR NR NR
- (NR No responses)
25AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS
- CHARGE ASSOCIATION (sporadic)
- C coloboma
- H heart anomalies
- A atresia of choanae
- R retarded growth/development
- G genital hypoplasia
- E ear anomalies (all types of hearing loss)
26AETIOLOGY OF HEARING LOSS
- Oculo-Auriculo-Vertebral spectrum
- (hemifacial microsomia, Goldenhar syndr.)
- Most cases are sporadic.
- Wide spectrum of anomalies
- Ear From isolated microtia to anotia. Mainly
conductive but also SNHL. - Facies Marked facial asymmetry
- Eyes From blepharoptosis to anophthalmia
- CNS, Heart, Trachea, Lung, Skeletal, Renal,
Gastrointestinal and oral manifestations