Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

Hearing Loss–Hidden disability

A

Most frequently occurring birth defect, people don’t realize they have a HL

NICU: higher chance of having HL 2.5/100

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2
Q

HL Statistics

A

3/1000 kids born with bilateral HL

1/1000 will have 40dB or greater mild
2/1000 will have 30dB or greater
2.5-3/1000 if include unilateral

by 9 years, stats double

33 infants born every day in US with HL

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3
Q

Risk Factor

A

Only 50% kids have HL associated with risk factor, 270 genes identified as being associated with HL

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4
Q

Incidence per 10,000 of congenital defects/diseases

A
  1. HL @ 30
  2. Cleft lip/plate @ 12
  3. Down syndrome @ 11
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5
Q

2-3/1000 babies born with HL due to…

A

50% genetic (30% is syndromic)
25% idiopathic
25% environmental (anoxia, exposed to drugs)

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6
Q

Syndromic Hearing Loss

A

Progressive HL:
Alport, NF2, Usher Type 3

Other:
BOR

congenital”
Apert, CHARGE, Jervell & Lange Nielsen, Pendred, Usher types I & 2, Waardenburg

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7
Q

Alport Syndrome

A

Progressive SNHL, occuar issues, bilateral mild-severe HL can progress, affects males more

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8
Q

NF2: Neurofibrotosis 2

A

slowly progresive HL, vestibular schwanomas benin tumors that cause this progressive HL–when remove tumors hearing is lost entirely and tumors come back

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9
Q

Usher Type 3

A

Progressive HL, progressive loss of vision (night vision lose peripheral vision then eventually tunnel vision)

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10
Q

Branchio-oto-renal (BOR)

A

any kind of HL (conductive, mixed, SNHL), kids born with outer ear malformations, mild profound kidney problems–over 90% of kids with this disease have hearing problems—-ear and kidney are first 2 pharyngeal arches

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11
Q

Apert Syndrome

A

Born with HL, skeletal malformations (prominent foreheads, suken eyes), very small body, many born with spina bifida, varying degrees of cognitive impairment (typically conductive HL) more common with older parents

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12
Q

CHARGE

A

colobomma of the eye (hole in iris), heart defects, coanal atresia (narrowing of nasal passage), renal problems, genitalia, ears (HL)

can lead to blindness, heart defects result in death, dialysis, debate in cochlear implant for older kids–only if parents have realistic expectations and get cardiologist to sign off

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13
Q

Jervell & Lange Nielsen Syndrome

A

not long life, fainting episodes due to heart disorders, profound SNHL

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14
Q

Pendred Syndrome

A

SNHL, vestibular dysfunction, thyroid problems

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15
Q

Usher Types 1&2

A

Profound SNHL at birth, progressive loss of vision

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16
Q

Waardenburg

A

Significant HL, wide set eyes & flattened, 2 different colored eyes, white lock of hair, cognitively intact—more physical in nature

17
Q

Nonsyndromic Hearing Loss

A

Pendred Syndrome/DFNB4
Mitochondrial
Auditory Neuropathy (AN)
Connexin

18
Q

DFNB4

A

Enlarged vestibular aqueduct, connects cochlea and vestibular portion–RED FLAG for progressive HL

more of a sudden SNHL cochlea HL then next time hearing drops a little lower and doesn’t come back to normal, fall off bike and now deaf because impact results in wipeout of cochlea—cannot play contact sports, stereoids help for a time

19
Q

Mitochondrial HL

A

finding it in small group of people in Arab-israeli (mother passes on to ALL children)

20
Q

Auditory Neuropathy/AN

A

genetic or environmental

classic symptoms: kid with normal OAEs, good HC good), leading cause we think is somewhere HC are functioning how they should but somewhere between release of NT and pickup of NT at the nerve there is a disconnect

true neuropathy means there is a problem in nerve-misnomer

normal cochlear function, abnormal neural function–any kind of hearing loss–spectrum

21
Q

Key to diagnose Auditory Neuropathy

A

Normal OAEs, Poor ability to understand speech, abnormal ABR

22
Q

Connexin 26

A

Common non-syndromic HL–ton of genetic work going into this–anywhere from mild-profound HL

in some ethnic populations 80% of HL due to this, in general population only 20% of HL—need to get a genetic workup to see if this is cause

23
Q

Acquired

A

Condition develops later in life

24
Q

Carrier

A

Unaffected individual who has one normal gene and one mutant/recessive gene

25
Q

Congenital

A

Condition present from birth

26
Q

Nonsyndromic

A

HL in absence of other medical conditions

27
Q

Syndromic HL

A

hearing deficit associated with other medical problems

28
Q

Dominant

A

Mutation in gene strong enough to make a person affected even if person also has a normal copy of gene

29
Q

Recessive

A

Mutation in gene that is not strong enough to make person affected even if person also has normal copy of gene

30
Q

What percentage of pre-lingual hereditary HL is non-syndromic

A

70%

80% is autosomal recessive
15% is autosomal dominant (tends to be progressive and milder than autosomal recessive)
2-3% is X-linked

Parents more likely to be prepared for this HL with syndrome cos it most likely runs in the family

31
Q

What percentage of pre-lingual hereditary HL is syndromic

A

30%

many are due to one mutated gene (X-linked or dominant)

32
Q

Recessive Mutation

A

Most common HL because they both have recessive gene and are very surprised when there is a child with a HL