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  • Title: Autosomal dominant low-frequency hearing impairment (DFNA6/14): a clinical and genetic family study.
    Author: Bom SJ, Van Camp G, Cryns K, Admiraal RJ, Huygen PL, Cremers CW.
    Journal: Otol Neurotol; 2002 Nov; 23(6):876-84. PubMed ID: 12438850.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: To delineate the phenotype and genotype of an autosomal dominant low-frequency sensorineural nonsyndromic hearing impairment trait in relation to similar traits. STUDY DESIGN: Family study, including retrospective case reviews. SETTING: Tertiary referral center. PATIENTS: Hearing impairment was documented in 11 family members in five generations, 8 of whom were alive and participated in this study. INTERVENTION: Diagnostic. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Clinical study: medical and otologic history and examination, retrieval of previous audiograms, pure-tone audiometry, and statistical analysis of audiometric data. Genetic study: linkage analysis of blood samples in 18 clinically affected and nonaffected family members. RESULTS: Hearing impairment had been present since early childhood, mainly affecting the low frequencies (mean threshold 45 dB HL at 0.25-1 kHz); speech recognition was hardly affected during the first three decades of life. Higher frequencies became involved with increasing age, thus causing a flat-type audiogram at middle age and down-sloping audiograms after age 60 years. Progression was mild but significant at all frequencies (0.5 dB/year at 0.25 kHz to 1.3 dB/year at 8 kHz) and persisted after correction was applied for normal presbyacusis. The trait was linked to chromosome 4p16.3, in a region comprising both the previously located, closely adjacent DFNA6 and the DFNA14 loci for low-frequency hearing impairment. CONCLUSION: A third family (designated Dutch II) was identified with a low-frequency hearing impairment trait showing linkage to chromosome 4p16.3 (DFNA6/14). The progression of hearing impairment beyond presbyacusis in the current study is unprecedented for DFNA6/14 traits.
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