Hearing Loss Flashcards

1
Q

GJB2 and GJB6 mutations characterize what kind of hearing loss?

A

non-syndromic, sensorineural, pre-lingual, sometimes progressive (dominant form), sometimes non-progressive (recessive form)

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2
Q

What gene is associated with a “cookie-bite” audiogram and what does this mean clinically?

A

TECTA; mild to moderate mid-frequency loss, progressive or stable, pre-lingual or post-lingual, sensorineural

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3
Q

What are clinical features associated with hearing loss caused by pathogenic variants in OTOF?

A

pre-lingual, non-syndromic, auditory neuropathy with severe to profound hearing loss
some cases show temperature sensitivity
ABR shows no auditory brainstem response but normal otoacoustic emissions

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4
Q

What are unique clinical symptoms associated with Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome?

A

prolonged QT interval on ECG, ventricular tachycardia, sudden cardiac death

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5
Q

What are clinical symptoms associated with Alport syndrome?

A

Most forms are X-linked
Kidney manifestations include hematuria and proteinuria that may progress to chronic kidney disease and end-stage renal disease

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6
Q

How are mitochondrial causes of hearing loss modified by the environment?

A

Exposure to aminoglycosides and a pathogenic variant in MT-RNR1 can result in profound deafness or mild to moderate progressive

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7
Q

Conductive hearing loss is due to:

A

abnormalities of the external ear and/or ossicles of the middle ear

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8
Q

Sensorineural hearing loss is due to:

A

malfunction of inner ear structures

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