1. Frequency and natural course of congenital cytomegalovirus-associated hearing loss in children.
- Author
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Kasuga M, Yoshimura H, Shinagawa J, Nishio SY, Takumi Y, and Usami SI
- Subjects
- Auditory Threshold, Child, Child, Preschool, Cytomegalovirus genetics, DNA, Viral blood, Female, Fetal Blood virology, Hearing Loss, Bilateral virology, Hearing Loss, Unilateral virology, Humans, Infant, Male, Retrospective Studies, Cytomegalovirus isolation & purification, Cytomegalovirus Infections complications, Fetal Diseases, Hearing Loss, Bilateral congenital, Hearing Loss, Unilateral congenital
- Abstract
Background: Congenital cytomegalovirus-associated hearing loss (cCMV-associated HL) is a common cause of congenital or early-onset deafness. Although cCMV infection has been reported to lead to various types of HL, the natural course of cCMV-associated HL over a long period is not yet known., Objectives: To investigate the clinical phenotype of cCMV-associated HL in the largest study to date., Methods: Thirty-one CMV-positive children, diagnosed by examining CMV DNA extracted from their dried umbilical cords retrospectively, were divided into unilateral and bilateral HL groups, and their hearing ability was evaluated using pure-tone audiometry and auditory steady-state response over time., Results: Thirteen patients (41.9%) had unilateral HL and 18 (58.1%) had bilateral HL. In most cases of unilateral cCMV-associated HL, the ear with better hearing maintained a normal hearing threshold. Notably, in most cases of both unilateral and bilateral HL, the ear with worse hearing ultimately showed severe to profound HL., Conclusion: Our findings revealed that the natural course of cCMV-associated HL was different between the cases of unilateral and bilateral HL, as well as between the ears with better or worse hearing in all cases. These findings indicate that accurate diagnosis could enable proper follow-up and management of cCMV-associated HL in children.
- Published
- 2021
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