scholarly journals High Frequency of AIFM1 Variants and Phenotype Progression of Auditory Neuropathy in a Chinese Population

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongyang Wang ◽  
Dan Bing ◽  
Jin Li ◽  
Linyi Xie ◽  
Fen Xiong ◽  
...  

To decipher the genotype-phenotype correlation of auditory neuropathy (AN) caused by AIFM1 variations, as well as the phenotype progression of these patients, exploring the potential molecular pathogenic mechanism of AN. A total of 36 families of individuals with AN (50 cases) with AIFM1 variations were recruited and identified by Sanger sequencing or next-generation sequencing; the participants included 30 patients from 16 reported families and 20 new cases. We found that AIFM1-positive cases accounted for 18.6% of late-onset AN cases. Of the 50 AN patients with AIFM1 variants, 45 were male and 5 were female. The hotspot variation of this gene was p.Leu344Phe, accounting for 36.1%. A total of 19 AIFM1 variants were reported in this study, including 7 novel ones. A follow-up study was performed on 30 previously reported AIFM1-positive subjects, 16 follow-up cases (53.3%) were included in this study, and follow-up periods were recorded from 1 to 23 years with average 9.75±9.89 years. There was no hearing threshold increase during the short-term follow-up period (1-10 years), but the low-frequency and high-frequency hearing thresholds showed a significant increase with the prolongation of follow-up time. The speech discrimination score progressed gradually and significantly along with the course of the disease and showed a more serious decline, which was disproportionately worse than the pure tone threshold. In addition to the X-linked recessive inheritance pattern, the X-linked dominant inheritance pattern is also observed in AIFM1-related AN and affects females. In conclusion, we confirmed that AIFM1 is the primary related gene among late-onset AN cases, and the most common recurrent variant is p.Leu344Phe. Except for the X-linked recessive inheritance pattern, the X-linked dominant inheritance pattern is another probability of AIFM1-related AN, with females affected. Phenotypical features of AIFM1-related AN suggested that auditory dyssynchrony progressively worsened over time.

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marion Souchal ◽  
Ludimila Labanca ◽  
Sirley Alves da Silva Carvalho ◽  
Luciana Macedo de Resende ◽  
Christelle Blavignac ◽  
...  

Damage to cochlear outer hair cells (OHCs) usually affects frequency selectivity in proportion to hearing threshold increase. However, the current clinical heuristics that attributes poor hearing performance despite near-normal auditory sensitivity to auditory neuropathy or “hidden” synaptopathy overlooks possible underlying OHC impairment. Here, we document the part played by OHCs in influencing suprathreshold auditory performance in the presence of noise in a mouse model of progressive hair cell degeneration, the CD1 strain, at postnatal day 18–30 stages when high-frequency auditory thresholds remained near-normal. Nonetheless, total loss of high-frequency distortion product otoacoustic emissions pointed to nonfunctioning basal OHCs. This “discordant profile” came with a huge low-frequency shift of masking tuning curves that plot the level of interfering sound necessary to mask the response to a probe tone, against interfering frequency. Histology revealed intense OHC hair bundle abnormalities in the basal cochlea uncharacteristically associated with OHC survival and preserved coupling with the tectorial membrane. This pattern dismisses the superficial diagnosis of “hidden” neuropathy while underpinning a disorganization of cochlear frequency mapping with optimistic high-frequency auditory thresholds perhaps because responses to high frequencies are apically shifted. The audiometric advantage of frequency transposition is offset by enhanced masking by low-frequency sounds, a finding essential for guiding rehabilitation.


2006 ◽  
Vol 120 (8) ◽  
pp. 613-618 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Maier ◽  
J Schipper

Low-frequency hearing impairment (LFHI) is mainly attributed to endolymphatic hydrops and has a great variety of possible outcomes. At present, no conservative therapeutic regimen has proven to be ‘gold-standard’, and information about the prognostic indicators of LFHI is scarce.In a retrospective investigation, we evaluated the records of 90 patients who had been treated with infusions improving blood perfusion. In patients lacking complete remission, dehydration infusion therapy was added. We also undertook audiometric follow up. We calculated the outcomes after infusion therapy, dehydration therapy and after long-time hearing follow up, and we determined the prognostic relevance of several parameters of anamnesis and clinical examination to outcomes, for both therapeutic interventions and long-time hearing.The prognosis of LFHI was significantly correlated to certain anamnestic and clinical parameters; a short duration of the disease, lack of vertigo and female gender implied a better outcome. The pretherapeutic hearing threshold was an important prognostic factor; the outcome was significantly worse in patients with distinct hearing impairment in low or high frequencies, compared with that in patients with little hearing loss. Whereas vertigo was a negative prognostic factor, the results of quantitative vestibular testing were irrelevant to the outcome. The glycerol test failed to predict the effectiveness of dehydration therapy and lacked any value in predicting prognosis.These results allow the clinician to focus the anamnesis and diagnostic examination on prognostically relevant parameters, thus enabling a better estimation of the long-term disease course and improved counselling of patients. Furthermore, these results help to distinguish valuable from irrelevant diagnostic procedures.


2014 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 135-139
Author(s):  
Ali Imam Ahsan ◽  
Rashedul Hasan ◽  
Nasimul Jamal

Auditory Neuropathy (AN), also known as Auditory Dyssynchrony(AD) is a very often missed diagnosis in clinical practice. In AN, sound enters the inner ear normally but the transmission of signals from inner ear to brain is impaired. Due to the lack of advanced audiological test facilities in Bangladesh, mostly AN remains undiagnosed. Here we described a 25 years old male, presented with difficulty in understanding speech for last 10 years. On audiologic evaluation, bilateral moderate sensorineural hearing loss was found on Pure tone audiogram (PTA). Speech discrimination scores were poor and disproportionate to his hearing threshold. Presence of Otoacoustic emission (OAE) revealed the normal function of cochlea. Conversely, absence of Auditory brainstem response (ABR) confirmed the definite dysfunction at auditory neural pathway and hence, the diagnosis of AN was confirmed. Since AN is an underdiagnosed condition in Bangladesh, otolaryngologists should be aware of this clinical entity. All the suspected cases should be referred to specialized centers, where advanced audiological facilities are available. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/bjo.v19i2.17638 Bangladesh J Otorhinolaryngol 2013; 19(2): 135-139


Neurosurgery ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 257-263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aage R. Møller ◽  
Margareta B. Møller

Abstract During a 14-month period, 129 individuals underwent 140 operations for microvascular decompression to relieve hemifacial spasm, disabling positional vertigo, tinnitus, or trigeminal neuralgia at our institution. Seven patients were operated upon twice on the same side and 4 were operated upon on both sides at different times. In each case, the brainstem auditory evoked potentials were monitored intraoperatively by the same neurophysiologist. In 75 of these operations, compound action potentials were also recorded from the exposed 8th nerve. Comparison of speech discrimination scores before the operation and at the time fo discharge showed that at discharge, discrimination had decreased in 7 patients by 15% or more and increased in 4 patients by 15% or more, in 2 patients by as much as 52%. Essentially similar results were obtained when preoperative speech discrimination scores were compared with results obtained from the 87 patients who returned for a follow-up visit between 3 and 6 months after discharge. Only one patient lost hearing (during a second operation to relieve hemifacial spasm). Another patient (also operated upon to relieve hemifacial spasm) suffered noticeable hearing loss postoperatively, but had recovered nearly normal hearing by 4 months after the operation. Nine patients had an average elevation of the hearing threshold for pure tones in the speech frequency range (500 to 2000 Hz) of 11 dB or more at 4 to 5 days after the operation; 8 of these had fluid in their middle ears that most likely contributed to the hearing loss. Threshold elevations occurred at 4000 Hz and 8000 Hz in 19 and 29 ears, respectively.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 5635-5635
Author(s):  
Jennifer R. Brown ◽  
Mark Klinger ◽  
Kieran Hervold ◽  
Stacey M. Fernandes ◽  
Kevin Hoang ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction : Recent studies have shown that leukemic clones in approximately 10-20% of CLL patients have stereotypic IgH gene sequences (Stamatopoulos et al., Blood 2007). These stereotypic IgH sequences are characterized by closely homologous complementarity-determining regions 3 (CDR3) sequences. The presence of these sequences supports the model of antigen-mediated disease pathogenesis in CLL. While previous studies have focused on the dominant CLL clone present at diagnosis, recent advances in next-generation sequencing enable analysis of the full IgH repertoire. Here we assessed whether stereotypic IgH sequences are present at very low frequency among the total IgH repertoire in diagnostic and follow-up samples from 36 CLL patients. Methods:We utilized the LymphoSIGHT method to sequence the IgH repertoire in 36 CLL patients and 185 patients with non-CLL lymphoid neoplasms. Using universal primer sets, we amplified IGH variable (V), diversity (D), and joining (J) gene segments in diagnostic and follow-up samples. Amplified products were sequenced, and CLL-specific clonotypes were identified in the diagnostic sample of each patient based on high-frequency within the B-cell repertoire. We selected a set of 289 stereotypic IgH CDR3 sequences that were previously curated (Stamatopoulos et al., Blood 2007; Messmer et al., Leukemia Res 2008). We assessed whether the stereotypic CDR3 regions were present in the IgH repertoire of both CLL and non-CLL patients using sequence alignment tools. Results: 154,318 IgH clonotypes were observed in the 36 CLL patients, while we identified 8,248,032 IgH clonotypes from 185 patients with non-CLL lymphoid neoplasms. Specifically, we tested 14 mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), 19 hodgkin disease (HD), and 28 acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients as well as three cohorts of multiple myeloma (MM) with 26, 30, and 68 patients. We assessed whether each of the 289 CDR3 stereotypes were present in the IgH repertoire of the CLL or non-CLL patients. Twenty two of the stereotypic IgH sequences were observed in any patient: 2 in CLL patients and 20 in the non-CLL patients. This is not surprising given that non-CLL patients have over 50 times the total number of clones compared to the CLL group. One of the stereotypic IgH clonotypes was detected in one CLL patient (p-value= 0.018; not significant with Bonferroni correction). The other stereotypic IgH clonotype was present in two CLL patients but not in any of the non-CLL lymphoid neoplasm cohorts (p=0.00034; 0.0074 Bonferroni corrected). In contrast, we tested for association between each of the 20 stereotypic sequences and each of the 6 control cohorts (3 MM, 1 MCL, 1 HD, and 1 ALL), and only two significant associations were observed (p=0.045 and p=0.01; neither were significant with Bonferroni correction). This underscores that the only significant association was seen in the tested CLL cohort. Of note, both of these stereotypic IgH clonotypes were present at very low frequency in the IgH repertoire (<10-4) (Figure 1). The two stereotypic IgH sequences identified in CLL patients were unmutated and match the previously published V, D, and J segments. Specifically, the stereotypic sequence ARHRLGYCSSTSCYYYYYGMDVWGQGTT present in one CLL patient has IGHV4-39, IGHJ6, and IGHD2-2 and the stereotypic sequence CARDSPLVVPAAIFYYYYGMDVW present in two CLL patients has IGHV3-48, IGHJ6, IGHD2-2. In contrast the vast majority of the hits in the non-CLL samples have V, D, and J sequences that are different from the published segments for the specific stereotypic sequence. Conclusion : Our results demonstrate that CLL patients harbor stereotypic IgH sequences. These sequences were not the dominant, high-frequency clonotypes identified at diagnosis in the CLL patients and were absent in a much larger set of clones derived from a cohort of non-CLL cancer patients. These results suggest that a subset of CLL patients may possess an antigen environment that selects for multiple B cells with stereotypic IgH sequences at low frequencies. This selection process may predispose patients to CLL that develops later via accumulation of multiple genetic hits in a pre-leukemic cell containing the stereotypic IgH sequence driving it to high-frequency. Figure 1. Each clonotype observed in two CLL patients (X axis) is shown as a dot. The Y axis depicts the frequency of the clonotypes. The stereotypic clonotypes are shown in red. Figure 1. Each clonotype observed in two CLL patients (X axis) is shown as a dot. The Y axis depicts the frequency of the clonotypes. The stereotypic clonotypes are shown in red. Disclosures Klinger: Sequenta, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Hervold:Sequenta, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Faham:Sequenta, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S204-S204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara H Qualls ◽  
Kanika arora ◽  
Julie Bobitt ◽  
Brian Kaskie

Abstract The rapidly rising rates of cannabis use among older adults may reflect a rise in late-onset users, re-engagement after a period without use, or a continuous use pattern since young adulthood that is more visible after legalization of cannabis. Older (age 60+) cannabis users (n=82) provided retrospective ratings on their frequency of use across adulthood. Approximately 28% were not using cannabis when young adults, with a larger percentage (40%) reporting non-use while ages 31-49 and 37% reported non-use when ages 50-64. Approximately 21% of older users were first time users, with 60% low frequency and 35% daily/weekly users. High frequency users generally were high frequency users throughout adulthood, but the pattern varied substantially by gender and mode of consumption. Women were more likely first-time users than men, and more likely non-smokers. Among non-smokers, about 40% were first-time users. Implications are explored for research, policy, and clinical practice.


2017 ◽  
Vol 153 (2) ◽  
pp. 536-549.e26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soo Young Cho ◽  
Jun Won Park ◽  
Yang Liu ◽  
Young Soo Park ◽  
Ju Hee Kim ◽  
...  

BMJ Open ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. e023220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satsue Nagahama ◽  
Ikuko Kashino ◽  
Huanhuan Hu ◽  
Akiko Nanri ◽  
Kayo Kurotani ◽  
...  

ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to determine whether haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) level is associated with the incidence of hearing impairment accounting for smoking status and diabetic condition at baseline.MethodsParticipants were 131 689 men and 71 286 women aged 30–65 years and free of hearing impairment at baseline (2008) who attended Japanese occupational annual health check-ups from 2008 to 2015. We defined low-frequency hearing impairment at a hearing threshold >30 dB at 1 kHz and high frequency at >40 dB at 4 kHz in the better ear in pure-tone audiometric tests. HbA1c was categorised into seven categories. The association between HbA1c and hearing impairment was assessed using the Cox proportional hazards model.ResultsOn 5 years mean follow-up, high HbA1c was associated with high-frequency hearing impairment. In non-smokers, HbA1c≥8.0% was associated with high-frequency hearing impairment, with a multivariable HR (95% CI) compared with HbA1c 5.0%–5.4% of 1.46 (1.10 to 1.94) in men and 2.15 (1.13 to 4.10) in women. There was no significant association between HbA1c and hearing impairment in smokers. A J-shaped association between HbA1c and high-frequency hearing impairment was observed for participants with diabetes at baseline. HbA1c was not associated with low-frequency hearing impairment among any participants.ConclusionsHbA1c ≥8.0% of non-smokers and ≥7.3% of participants with diabetes was associated with high-frequency hearing impairment. These findings indicate that appropriate glycaemic control may prevent diabetic-related hearing impairment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-135
Author(s):  
Ekaterina S. Garbaruk ◽  
Alice A. Nnomzoo ◽  
Pavel V. Pavlov ◽  
Oksana C. Gorkina

Congenital heart disease (CHD) is one of the most common types of birth defect. Often newborn hearing screening is not performed for infants with congenital heart disease because of serious health problems at birth. Hearing loss in children with CHD may have late onset due to different stages of CHD treatment. The monitoring of the auditory function is required for early identification of hearing loss in children with CHD, however algorithm of follow-up assessment is not currently defined. Objective – estimation of prevalence, types and time of hearing loss onset in children with congenital heart disease and development a follow-up assessment for CHD children. Results. 148 children with congenital heart disease have been evaluated with auditory brainstem response testing, otoacoustic emissions, impedancemetry, behavioral hearing tests. The patients ranged in age from 7 days to 6 years. 55 children had hearing loss: 28 children with conductive hearing loss and 27 children with sensorineural hearing loss, 2 of them with auditory neuropathy. 6 children had late onset sensorineural hearing loss. The age of delayed hearing loss identification ranged from 4 months to 5 years. Conclusion. Children with CHD require long-term monitoring of the auditory function; an algorithm of follow-up assessment for children with congenital heart disease is proposed. Audiological assessment in children with CHD should include auditory brainstem response registration for auditory neuropathy identification.


2019 ◽  
Vol 02 (02) ◽  
pp. 078-078
Author(s):  
Gascón Jaén J. ◽  
Poveda Pagán EJ ◽  
Martín-Pintado Zugasti A.

Abstract Background and Aims Percutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (PENS) is a type of current which is frequently used for post-needling soreness. However, to date, no studies have compared the different frequencies available for reducing post-needling soreness. The aim of this study was to research the immediate and short-term effects of the PENS current at 2 Hz frequency compared to PENS at 1000 Hz frequency applied after dry needling on post-needling soreness, disability associated with post-needling soreness and the pain pressure threshold (PPT) in latent myofascial trigger points (MTrPs) of the upper trapezius. Material and Methods An experimental double-blind non-controlled study. In total, 23 subjects without pain and with latent MTrPs in the upper trapezius participated in the study. Dry needling was performed, until the disappearance of local twitch responses. After randomization, 11 subjects received PENS at 100 Hz, whereas 12 received PENS at 2 Hz. The current was applied during 15 minutes, the duration of the current pulse was 100 microseconds. The main variable used was the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) to evaluate post-needling pain. The Neck Disability Index (NDI) and the PPT were secondary variables. The patient completed a diary on post-needling soreness in the hours following the intervention. A follow-up of the study variables was performed at 24 hours, 72 hours and one week after performing the intervention. Results Statistically significant differences were obtained between both groups in post-needling soreness immediately after the intervention (P = 0.002) and at 5 minutes (P = 0.03) in favor of the high frequency group. No differences were found in any of the follow-up periods and the pain disappeared in all subjects before 72 hours. Regarding the PPT, no significant differences were found between both groups. However, the group who received high frequency returned to their baseline conditions at 24 hours, whereas those who received low frequency returned to baseline conditions at 72 hours. All the subjects increased their PPT one week after receiving the intervention (P < 0.05), nonetheless, they did not reach the minimum detectable change. No significant differences were found between groups according to the NDI. Conclusion The application of high frequency PENS after dry needling is more effective than low frequency PENS to reduce post-needling soreness in the short term in patients with latent MTrPs in the sample under study. No differences were found between groups regarding disability or the PPT. Our results are limited, future studies are required to establish the optimal frequency for reducing post-needling soreness.


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