Objectives: The aim of this work was to assess the type and site of the 35delG gene mutation in patients presenting with profound SNHL and scheduled for cochlear implantation. The secondary objectives were to determine their geographical distribution throughout Egypt, screening of the parents for the mutation, and to correlate the type of mutation with clinical severity and outcomes after surgery.
Methods: The study was carried out on 100 consecutive patients schedu led for cochlear implantation. Patients with syndromic hearing loss or noncongenital hearing loss (trauma, infections, and ototoxicity) were excluded. All patients were subjected to detailed history taking including geographic tagging for their origins in Egypt, imaging (CT and MRI cochlear implantation protocols), full audiological evaluation (PTA, ABR, and TEOAE), and genetic screening for GJB2 mutation using Invitrogen PCR mix and ApaI restriction enzyme (North America, CA, 10572-014). The parents of mutation-positive patients were also subjected to audiological and genetic analysis. All patients were subjected to postimplantation evaluation of hearing after 6 and 12 months.
Results: There were 64 males and 36 females from 98 families. Ages ranged between 1.9 and 7 years (mean 3.72 years). They originated from all over Egypt but the majority came from the Giza and Cairo areas. The 35delG mutations were found in exon 2 in 31% of the cases and all were heterozygous. I n the parents, 18 mothers and 13 fathers were positive but only 8 had mild to moderate SNHL. Hearing evaluation by pure tone and speech discrimination scores at 6 and 12 months showed that the 35delG children had a statistically better result compared to the children without this mutation.
Conclusion: The prevalence of the 35delG mutation in nonsyndromic children in this sample was 31% which is different from previous studies in the Egyptian population but close to the values found in other populations in the Mediterranean basin.
ORL
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