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J Am Acad Audiol 6 : 15-27 (1995) Nosology of Deafness John T. Jacobson* Abstract It is estimated that about one half of all congenital deafness and/or hearing impairment is inherited and that approximately one third of this communicative disorder is associated with syndromic abnormalities. The remainder of inherited deafness occurs as an isolated entity, independent of alterations in physical status or any disease process. This latter group typically presents with no clinical signs or symptoms or other dysmorphic stigmata that might help in the early identification of hearing loss . As contemporary advances in genetic testing and therapy emerge, there is an ever-increasing opportunity to provide improved diagnosis and counseling to those with inherited disorders. Over the past 3 decades, there have been several distinct categorical systems introduced to define deafness . Most often, the nosology of deafness is described by either origin, onset, degree and type of severity, and/or structural pathology. Therefore, understanding the cause and nature of hearing loss is the first measure in the accurate diagnosis and management of patient care . This article describes several classification schemata, citing examples of numerous congenital syndromes and other disorders that contribute to deafness . Key Words: Autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, congenital, deafness, hearing impairment, inheritance, syndrome, X-linked egardless of the etiology or onset, newborn and/or childhood hearing impairRment has significant long-term consequences for the affected infant and family members, as well as for society in general. Unequivocal evidence supports the relationship between deafness and deficits in speech, language, and cognitive development, limitations in educational and socioeconomic opportunities, and discrimination in work-related placement. As a result, the importance of early identification and early management has been universally advocated. Recently, the Joint Committee on Infant Hearing (1994) and the National Institute of Health Consensus Development Conference Statement on Early Identification of Hearing Impairment in Infants and Young Children (National Institutes of Health, 1993) have recognized and acknowledged these principles of early identification and have recommended uni- *Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Division of Audiology, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, Virginia Reprint requests : John T. Jacobson, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, 825 Fairfax Ave ., Suite #510, Norfolk, VA 23507 versal infant hearing screening. Recommendations include not only the hearing screening of infants at risk for hearing loss, as determined by a high-risk register, but also all normal healthy, term babies . These recommendations take into account that only about one half of all hearing-impaired infants are identified through the implementation of risk factors ; the remainder of infants and children identified with hearing loss result from genetic factors with a negative family history (Rose et al, 1977). Because as many as one third of all patients with hereditary hearing loss are associated with other syndromic abnormalities, medical management, including newly developed genetic techniques, is a priority in the overall health care strategy. With recent advances in genetic mapping of the human genome and the ability to determine its DNA sequence, there is an increasing opportunity to provide improved counseling and other available medical management alternatives to individuals of the more than 4000 inherited diseases . To address this formidable task, hearing health care professionals require, in addition to their specific area of expertise, broad-based knowledge in such areas as genetics, craniofacial embryology, and normal growth and devel- Journal of the American Academy of Audiology/Volume 6, Number 1, January 1995 opment. Advance knowledge should lead to an improved comprehensive service through the recognition, diagnosis, and eventual auditory management of the patient. The information found within the article summarizes multidisciplinary efforts that have added to and elucidate both inherited and acquired factors associated with deafness and hearing impairment . Several fundamental genetic concepts were discussed in the article by Smith (1995) in this issue and are an integral part of discussions that follow in this special issue on hereditary syndromes and other childhood auditory disorders. The following is a review of existing classification schemes of deafness and hearing impairment that also includes their diverse modes of inheritance. For an excellent, comprehensive, readable review of genetics, the reader is referred to and encouraged to examine Smith's Recognizable Patterns ofHuman Malformation (Jones, 1988). CLASSIFICATION T here are several methods of classifying hearing impairment and/or deafness, but most often they are described in terms of either their origin (e .g ., hereditary, acquired), onset (e .g ., congenital, delayed), degree and type of severity (e .g ., mild-to-profound sensory, conductive, or mixed), and/or structural pathology (e.g ., inner ear congenital anomaly types: Michel, Mondini, Scheibe, etc.) . Although there are other descriptive nomenclature, these four classifications or combinations of these four are most commonly found in the literature . Intrinsically, within each classification category there may be several descriptive subsets and, as a result, interrelationships between categories and their subsets often introduce more confusion than clarification. As an example, McKusick (1992) has listed seven distinct methods of describing genetic disorders, suggesting that the naming of syndromes is, at best, disorderly. He argues that the name for a genetic trait should have some relation to the basic defect, should be imaginative, and should present an image of the phenotype. McKusick states that terminology should be appropriate for transmittal to patients but readily admits that there is little sense to the use of disorder, disease, syndrome, and anomaly. The terms association and anomalad were proposed (Smith, 1974) for some birth defects but, according to McKusick, are of limited use in connection with Mendelian phenotypes . Often, the terms malformation, 16 deformation, and disruption have been used interchangeably, but they express specific distinctions in birth defects. The term malformation refers to a basic abnormality in embryologic development; deformation connotes intrauterine pressure effects, whereas the effects of abnormal vascular supply to developing structures are best described as a disruption . In short, Diefendorf and colleagues (1993) have correctly pointed out that the best interests of the patient are served when intervention strategies embrace common goals and when a common terminology is optimized. The causes of deafness tend to be broadly classified into three primary categories : genetic (hereditary disorder), nongenetic (acquired), and unknown causes . It is estimated that about one half of all congenital deafness is hereditary, that is, the genetic trait of deafness is passed from parent(s) to offspring (Beighton, 1983 ; NIDCD, 1989). The remainder of hearing impairment appears equally represented by either causative (nongenetic) factors or by those of unknown origin . The ability to hear is a genetic predisposition and therefore is present in the majority of live births ; however, if an inherited auditory deficit is identified at birth, three recognized genetic forms of inheritance may be considered as potential contributing factors. They include single gene abnormalities, chromosomal aberrations, and disorders due to multifactoral inheritance . Of noteworthy clinical significance, hereditary hearing loss may be congenital (present at birth) or may manifest at a later period in life . Importantly, regardless of the descriptive classification scheme employed, a thorough knowledge of the nosology of deafness is a prerequisite to correct medical and audiologic management of hearing impairment . This article addresses two commonly referred classification systems, inherited hearing loss and congenital hearing loss . Acquired hearing loss that results from environmental factors is described later in this issue (by Strasnick and Jacobson, 1995). Inherited Hearing Loss To review, Mendelian laws describe genetic traits (physical characteristics) of inheritance that are passed from one generation to another. These fundamental physical and functional units of inheritance are called genes and consist of segments of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) that encode the blueprint for every living thing. DNA is structurally packaged within chromo- Nosology of Deafness/Jacobson somes. Each human cell contains 46 chromosomes in 23 pairs. Twenty-two of the pairs are identical in the male and female and are designated as autosomes. The remaining pair are called the sex chromosomes and are represented by two X chromosomes in the female and one X and one Y chromosome in the male . One chromosome of each pair is inherited from each parent and, with the exception of the XY male chromosome, each genetic determinant is present in two doses (Jones, 1988). Pairs of genes are called alleles and occupy the identical site on homologous chromosomes . Unless there is a structural anomaly, each pair of homologous chromosomes is identical with respect to its locus. A gene that alters normal characteristics is referred to as a mutant gene . The full complement of genetic material in the set of chromosomes of an organism is called its genome . One method of describing a chromosome is by its structural morphology ; its narrowest point is called a centromere . Each chromosome has a characteristic length and position of the centromere, allowing each projection to be called an arm. At metaphase, each chromosome has paired long and short arms . The short arms are designated as "p" (petite) and the long arms as "q." Reference to a specific arm of chromosome 1 would be to lp or 1q, to chromosome 2 as 2p and 2q, and so forth. The designation of a + or - sign before a chromosome number is indicative of the addition or absence of an entire chromosome . This represents a numeric chromosomal aberration . An example of this is the karyotype 47, XY, +21, which is that of a male with an extra number 21 chromosome (i .e ., trisomy 21 - Down syndrome). In contrast, the designation of a + or - sign following a chromosome number represents an increase or decrease in chromosome length . This represents a structural chromosomal anomaly. Such an example is Cri-du-chat syndrome, represented as 46,YX,5p-, meaning 46 chromosomes, in a female with deletion of the short arm of the #5 chromosome . This basic form of descriptive reference is referred to as karyotype nomenclature . Single Gene Mutation Single gene (monogenic) mutations that cause changes in the normal sequence of DNA base pairs are associated forms of Mendelian inheritance that are designated as autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, and sex (X)linked patterns . X-linked inherited disorders Normal Dominant Heterozygous Recessive Homozygous Recessive Except for the XY, there is a pair of genes for each function, located at the same loci on sister chromosomes . One pair of normal genes is represented as dots on a homologous pair of chromosomes. A single mutant (changed) gene is dominant if it causes an evident abnormality. The chance of inheritance of the mutant gene (M) is the same as the chance of inheriting a particular chromosome of the pair: 50 per cent . A single mutant gene is recessive (1) if it causes no evident abnormality, the function being well covered by the normal partner gene (allele) . Such an individual may be referred to as a heterozygous carrier. When both genes are recessive mutant ()o.) the abnormal effect is expressed . The parents are generally carriers, and their risk of having another affected offspring is the chance of receiving the mutant from one parent (50 per cent) times the chance from the other (50 per cent) or 25 per cent for each offspring . An X-linked recessive will be expressed in the male because he has no normal partner gene . His daughters, receiving the X, will all be carriers, and his sons, receiving the Y, will all be normal . X-linked Recessive An X-linked recessive will not show overt expression in the female because at least part of her "active" X's will contain the normal gene . The risk for affected sons and carrier daughters will each be 50 per cent. Figure 1 Diagram of normal and major mutant gene Mendelian inheritance. (Jones KL . [19881 . Smith's Recognizable Patterns ofHuman Malformations. 4th ed . Philadelphia: WB Saunders, 646. Reprinted with permission from the publisher.) may be either recessive or dominant (addressed in the following discussion). A diagrammatic representation of Mendelian inheritance is illustrated in Figure 1 . Single gene mutations may cause about 1500 rare syndromes, diseases, and morphologic traits that are associated with a high risk of recurrence (Jones, 1988). The term syndrome is used to describe a pattern of multiple anomalies that are pathogenetically related, that is, attributable to a specific etiology. Syndromes are either known-genesis (e .g ., Turner syndrome, a chromosomal aberration causing external and middle ear abnormalities and sensory and mixed hearing loss) or unknown-genesis types (e .g ., Goldenhar syndrome, affecting the development of the first and second branchial arch derivatives, causing a multitude of facial deformities and malformations, including inner ear anomalies), having several subcategories (Cohen, 1982). Autosomal-Recessive Inheritance. Autosomal-recessive inheritance requires a pair of Journal of the American Academy of Audiology/Volume 6, Number 1, January 1995 genes for hearing loss, one recessive gene from each parent to produce the disorder. The mutant gene must be present in a double dose for abnormal characteristics to present. The term recessive applies only to homozygous (a condition having similar genetic patterns at both alleles) expressed traits . Parents are heterozygous, having one normal and one abnormal allele, and clinically asymptomatic . Recessive inherited hearing loss is by far the largest of the single gene mutations, consisting of about 80 percent of this genetic trait. Although usually unaffected, these carriers will pass a copy of the identical recessive gene for hearing loss to about 25 percent of their children . Infants with recessive inherited hearing deficits that are first born to families comprise the largest percentage of neonatal hospital-discharged, unidentified, hearing-impaired babies, since there are no associated abnormalities and generally no other recognized familial hearing loss . With minor exception, these otherwise healthy babies are typically not screened for hearing loss and are discharged with no confirmed knowledge or even suspicion of possible auditory deficits . Autosomal-Dominant Inheritance. About 20 percent of genetic hearing loss is attributed to autosomal-dominant inheritance (Rose et al, 1977). The term dominant applies to a genetic pattern that is expressed when only one gene from either parent is dominant for hearing loss (heterozygous state) . In this condition, an affected parent need pass only a single mutant gene in a single dose to cause the trait. Thus, the trait is manifested in every infant who inherits the gene, irrespective of the condition (normal) of the other allele . The affected offspring will either be the product of an affected parent who expresses the gene or the result of a new mutation dominant trait (Nora and Fraser, 1989). From this inheritance pattern, the risk for hearing impairment is 50 percent for each pregnancy. The carrier is almost always hearing impaired . The term penetrance refers to the proportion of individuals who have clinical expression of the gene in some form or another and transmit it to their offspring; 100 percent penetrance suggests that all individuals with the gene have symptoms of the disorder. The degree of clinical manifestation varies greatly between individuals with a specific disorder. The term expressivity describes the degree of clinical variability encountered from mild to 18 severe . In Waardenburg syndrome, an autosomal-dominant disorder, 50 percent of the offspring are affected but only 20 percent have deafness (Jones, 1988). Often in the same family, the expressivity differs substantially (e .g., see Treacher Collins Syndrome in this issue [Jahrsdoerfer and Jacobson, 1995]) . X-Linked Inheritance. X-linked inherited hearing loss accounts for the remaining 1 to 2 percent of this genetic trait (Nance and Sweeney, 1975). X-linked genes can be either recessive or dominant . Because of the XX (female)/XY (male) chromosomal relationship, a female with a recessive gene for hearing loss on one of her two X chromosomes will have normal hearing. Only males are affected with offspring having a 50 percent chance of hearing loss, whereas each daughter has a 50 percent chance of carrying the affected gene and, in turn, transmitting the X-linked trait to 50 percent of her sons . A male with the gene cannot pass the trait on to his sons (since they will have inherited his Y chromosome), but all of his daughters will be carriers . Further, the potential for a new mutation in X-linked disorders also exists . Two well-known, X-linked, recessive gene disorders are Hunter and Alport syndromes (the latter is described in detail by Wester [1995] in this special issue) . In contrast, X-linked dominant disorders are generally expressed in hemizygous males (a condition where only one allele of a specific gene locus is present) and is only relevant for X-linked recessive inheritance, since the recessive allele appears because there is no corresponding allele on the Y chromosome . Therefore, since a dominant allele will be expressed with just one "dose," it does not matter if the individual is a heterozygous female or hemizygous male . The pedigree pattern of X-linked dominant traits differs from that of autosomal dominance only in that all of the daughters and none of the sons of affected males will be affected, since a male gives his X chromosome only to his daughters (Nora and Fraser, 1989). One example of an X-linked, dominant, inherited trait is otopalatodigital syndrome (Gorlin et al, 1973). Otopalatodigital syndrome, types I and II (a more severe skeletal manifestation of type I, with a life expectancy of about 5 years), includes auditory abnormalities usually limited to conductive pathology due to middle ear ossicular anomalies (Dudding et al, 1967). Recently, Brunner (1991) reported nearly Nosology of Deafness/Jacobson 30 distinct X-linked conditions that have hearing loss as an associated anomaly. Chromosomal Aberrations Genetic hearing loss may also be the result of chromosomal or cytogenetic (the study of chromosomes) abnormalities such as numeric distribution errors that may consist of the presence (e .g., trisomy 18 [47,XX,+18] representing chromosome 18 in triplicate rather than in duplicate) or absence (e .g., Turner syndrome ; 45,X) of an additional chromosome . Chromosomal aberrations may also present as structural errors in which deletions, additions, duplications, translocations, and inversions may occur (Rollnick and Smith, 1986 ; Jung, 1989). Chromosomal disorders account for about 1 percent of the total newborn population (Jacobs, 1977). Down syndrome (trisomy 21) is the most familiar and common chromosomal abnormality, having an incidence of about 1 :600 live births (de Grouchy and Truleau, 1984) and producing a high incidence of conductive hearing loss (Balkany et al, 1979) and, to a lesser degree, associated auditory sensory pathology. In Down syndrome, there is evidence that sensory auditory pathology worsens with age, suggesting a possible acquired component (Keiser et al, 1981). For an in-depth review, see Diefendorf et al (1995), in this special issue. Multifactorial Inheritance Deafness due to multifactoral (polygenic) inheritance refers to the additive effects of several minor gene pair abnormalities in association with nongenetic environmental interactive factors (McKusick, 1992). In these cases, genetic inheritance is difficult to ascertain; however, there remains a familial predisposition for a disorder to occur at a greater incidence than that found in the general population. In addition to hearing loss within this category, a higher incidence of craniofacial birth defects may occur, including cleft lip and palate . For example, Pierre Robin sequence is a triad of micrognathia, cleft palate, and glossoptosis (Gorlin et al, 1990). A sequence is considered a multiple pattern of anomalies, but unlike a syndrome, a sequence results from a primary anomaly such as micrognathia, as in the case of Robin sequence . In this sequence, the presence of mandibular hypoplasia has not been accurately traced and the underlying cause could be a combination of genetic factors or a secondary effect of in utero compression of the mandible, limiting its growth and development (Jung, 1989). Robin sequence may also be a feature of a genetic syndrome such as Beckwith-Wiedemann in rare cases, Catel-Manzke, Donlan, Myotonic dystrophy, otopalatodigital type II, or velocardiofacial . It may also be identified in a chromosomal syndrome such as del(4p) or dup(llq) . Robin sequence has been reported as the result of fetal exposure to a teratogen as in fetal alcohol or fetal trimethadione syndromes or in conditions of unknown etiology, such as CHARGE association (see Toriello [1995], in this special issue) and Moebius sequence . Auditory abnormalities include low-set and malformed ears and mixed hearing loss (Smith and Stowe, 1961). Its most common association, however, is with Stickler syndrome (Turner, 1974 ; Cohen et al, 1990 ; Gorlin et al, 1990). Stickler syndrome is an autosomal-dominant hereditary condition that presents with pathognomonic facial features, bone dysplasia, myopia, and auditory deficits (Stickler et al, 1965 ; Stickler and Pugh, 1967 ; Gorlin et al, 1990). This skeletal disorder has been linked to chromosome 12q, close to the structural gene for type II collagen (Francomano et al, 1987). There is evidence, however, that mutations in the collagen gene itself are the cause of the syndrome in some but not in all cases, whereas other cases do not show linkage to that region . These findings led to a syndrome that produces expressive variability and high but incomplete penetrance (Weingeist et al, 1982 ; Suslak and Desposito, 1988). Because such similar clinical traits are reported between Pierre Robin sequence and Stickler syndrome, Herrmann and colleagues (1975) have suggested that as many as half of those with the Pierre Robin sequence may have the inherited disorder, Stickler syndrome . The degree and type of hearing loss has been variable in these disorders (Jacobson et al, 1990a) . Multifactoral risk characteristics are dependent on ethnic origin, gender, the number of affected relatives and their relationship in any one family, and the severity of the defect (Rollnick and Smith, 1986). Table 1 lists some common, inherited hearing disorders based on single gene abnormalities (autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, and X-linked), chromosomal aberrations, and disorders due to multifactoral inheritance . The majority of inherited hearing loss occurs as an isolated entity, independent of other changes in physical status or disease processes. Typically, there are no additional clinical signs or symptoms or other dysmorphic stigmata Journal of the American Academy of Audiology/ Volume 6, Number 1, January 1995 Table 1 Classification of Primary Categories of Common Inherited Hearing Loss Autosomal-Recessive Inherited Single Gene Disorders Abert-Schonberg (type 1) Alstrom Bloom Carpenter Cockayne Hallgren Hurler Jervell and Lange-Nielsen Laurence-Moon-Biedl Klippel-Feil sequence Mobius Mucopolysaccharidoses (types I-VII) Oro-facial-digital (Mohr-type II) Pendred Pili torti (with deafness) Refsum Sanfilipo Sickle cell anemia Usher (types I, II) Chromosomal Aberrations Numerical Trisomy (13, 18 & 21, Down) Turner Structural Cri du chat DiGeorge sequence Prader-Willi Wolfe-Hirshhorn Autosomal-Dominant Inherited X-Linked Inherited Alport (types I, V, VI) Apert Branch io-oto-renal Crouzon Goldenhar Klippel-Fell Leopard Marfan Marshall Myosilis ossificans Neurofibromatosis Nager Noonan Osteogenesis imperfecta (types II, III) Otosclerosis Paget Pyle disease Stickler Symphalangism Townes Treacher Collins van der Woude Waardenburg Alport (types II-IV) Fabry Fragile X Hypogonadism Hunter Norrie Oro-facial-digital (type I) Oto-palatal-digital (types I, II) Perilymph gusher Zinsser-Engman-Cole (dyskeratosis congenita) Multifactorial Inheritance (single or multiple gene abnormality with possible nongenetic environmental factors) Cornelia de Lange DiGeorge sequence Goldenhar Klippel-Fell Pierre-Robin sequence Wildervanck Specific syndromes may be listed in more than one category because more than one type may exist, associated with this type of hearing loss, often making early identification of hearing loss problematic. However, about one third of all genetic hearing loss accompanies syndromes having physical characteristics such as craniofacial anomalies or multiple congenital organ system malformations. Specific examples include hearing impairment with craniofacial and musculoskeletal disease (e .g ., Crouzon syndrome, an autos omal-dominant disorder), eye disease (e .g ., Alstrom syndrome, an autosomal-recessive disorder), skin disease (e.g., Leopard syndrome, an autosomal-dominant disorder), and metabolic abnormalities (Hurler and Hunter syndromes, autosomal recessive and X-linked, respectively) . The most common metabolic disorder with hearing loss is Pendred syndrome, having an incidence of about 1:200,000 . This autosomal-recessive endocrine-metabolic trait, which usually presents with hypothyroidism, 20 goiter abnormality, severe sensory hearing loss, and often defective vestibular function, may account for up to 10 percent of all congenital deafness (Batsakis and Nishiyama, 1962 ; McKusick, 1992)..Van Wouwe et al (1986) have linked Pendred syndrome to duplication deficiency, that is, duplication in 10p and deficiency in distal 8q. This classification system, which combines hearing loss with an organ system defect caused by the same gene, was described by Konigsmark and Gorlin (1976) . Table 2 lists inherited syndromes by their major physical organ abnormality, each having some degree of hearing loss as a component of the disorder. At present, over 90 different types of hereditary deafness have been identified and their degree of severity varies dramatically (Konigsmark and Gorlin, 1976 ; McKusick, 1992). Nosology of Deafness/Jacobson Table 2 Classification of Genetic Hearing Loss Incorporating Major System Defects No Associated Abnormalities Dominant congenital severe sensory Dominant progressive early-onset sensory Dominant unilateral sensory Otosclerosis (conductive or mixed loss) Recessive congenital severe sensory Recessive congenital moderate sensory Recessive early-onset sensory X-linked congenital sensory X-linked early-onset sensory X-linked moderate sensory Atresia of auditory canal - conductive Musculoskeletal Disease Albers-Schonberg disease (osteopetrosis) Apert syndrome (type I) Cornelia de Lange Crouzon syndrome Forney syndrome Goldenhar Juvenile Paget's disease Karmondy-Feingold Klippel-Feil syndrome Kniest syndrome Mohr syndrome Osteogenesis imperfecta (types I-IV) Otopalatodigital syndrome Pierre Robin sequence Sanfilipo (type III) Stickler syndrome Treacher Collins syndrome van Buchem's disease Wildervanck syndrome Renal Disease Adolescent renal tubular acidosis Alport syndrome Branch io-oto-renal Charcot-Marie-Tooth syndrome Infantile renal tubular acidosis Macrothrombocytopathia Lemieux-Neemeh syndrome Nephritis-Muckle-Wells syndrome Renal, genital, and middle ear anomalies Nervous System Disease Ataxia Bulbopontine paralysis Diabetes mellitus Mycoclonic elipepsy and sensory deafness Neoplastics Neurofibromatosis Noonan syndrome Progressive sensory neuropathy Richards-Rundle syndrome External Ear Abnormalities Atresia Otofaciocervical syndrome Lacrimoauriculodentodigiral syndrome Lop ears, micrognathia, and conductive hearing loss Malformed low-set ears Microtia Preauricular pits, branchial fistulas Thickened ear lobes Integumentary (Skin) System Disease Dominant onychodystrophy Dominant piebald trait Fragile X Leopard syndrome Pili Torti and sensory hearing loss Recessive onychodystrophy Recessive piebaldness Waardenburg syndrome (types I, II) Eye Disease Alstrom syndrome Cockayne syndrome Cryptophthalmia syndrome Hallgren syndrome Harboyan syndrome Laurence-Moon-Biedl syndrome Marshall syndrome Mobius syndrome Norrie syndrome Optic atrophy, juvenile diabetes Refsum syndrome Rosenberg-Chutorian syndrome Usher syndrome (types I, II) Metabolic and Other Abnormalities Familial streptomycin ototoxicity Pendred syndrome Mucopolysaccaridoses Hurler syndrome Hunter syndrome Scheie syndrome Mannosidosis Jervell Large-Nielsen syndrome Sickle cell disease Trisomy 13, 18, and 21 Turner syndrome Modified from Konigsmark and Gorlin, 1976 . Congenital Hearing Loss The term congenital is used to describe a condition or symptom, the onset of which occurred at (perinatal) or before (prenatal) birth. Congenital birth defects imply that during certain critical periods of the pregnancy, changes in normal morphologic and functional development have occurred that are recognized at birth or manifest and progress later in life . Importantly, there is a systematic pattern of embryologic development that exists within the human auditory system . Consider the external ear, which consists of the pinna and external audi- Journal of the American Academy of Audiology/Volume 6, Number 1, January 1995 tory canal (EAC). By the fourth gestational week, the pinna begins to develop around the first branchial groove from first (mandibular) and second (hyoid) branchial arch mesoderm . Within 2 weeks, these arches divide into six hillocks, each contributing to a specific structural component of the pinna. Williams (1994) reports that the first three hillocks are formed from the mandibular arch and the remaining three are derived from the hyoid arch . By the twentieth fetal week, the pinna has reached adult shape and location (Kenna, 1990). The developmental pattern of the EAC is similar in that by the fourth gestational week, it begins its maturation from the first branchial groove between the mandibular and hyoid arches . By the eighth week, a tube is shaped from the branchial groove, ultimately forming the outer one third (primary meatus) of the EAC. Simultaneously, a dense epidermal plug extends medial, reaching the primary tympanic cavity to cast the meatal plate. Mesenchyme then begins to constitute a bridge between the epithelial cells and the meatal plate. Absorption of epithelial cells takes place by the fifth month, establishing a canal and leaving only an ectodermal plug. Eventually, the medial bony two-thirds portion of the EAC is derived from this ectodermal tube (Schuknecht and Gulya, 1986). Importantly, any alteration to normal fetal development of the external ear within this critical time frame may result in congenital malformations to either the pinna or the EAC. Take, for instance, malformations of the branchial sinus and/or cyst, which result in defects in the resolution of the branchial cleft. Primary causes usually occur prior to the eighth week, resulting in preauricular malformations (Jones, 1988). Because anatomic structures comprising the auditory system have independent developmental archetype, congenital anomalies may be independent, as in first and second branchial arch disorders that directly involve the external and middle ear, leaving the inner ear predominantly unscathed. Therefore, in the clinical analysis of patients who present with craniofacial anomalies, an expanded knowledge of the developmental patterns of the auditory system may help to support and explain findings that are associated with congenital ear abnormalities and provide realistic management strategies in this population base . The incidence of total deafness represents less than 1 percent of infants and children with congenital auditory deficits, thus leaving the vast majority with some degree of residual hearing. The term congenital hearing loss is often lim22 ited to that population with severe-to-profound sensory auditory deficits . This description is somewhat restrictive and should be expanded to include those with conductive as well as mixed hearing loss of all degrees of severity, since hearing loss at birth is congenital by definition. Congenital hearing loss may result from either genetic and/or other factors such as prenatal viral infection, anoxia, trauma, or other perinatal insults of known or unknown origin . Therefore, congenital hearing impairment may not necessarily be genetically based. Further, a congenital syndrome may also have later-onset hearing loss . For example, congenital syphilis (nongenetic disorder), which has shown substantial increases of occurrence over the past decade, is present at birth because it is a prenatal event, but hearing loss is delayed, since symptoms are usually not demonstrated until the teenage years. Alport syndrome is a heterogenetic kidney disease often progressing to renal failure (Barker et al, 1990). It has six subtypes and two modes of inheritance: autosomal dominant (types I, V, and VI) and Xlinked dominant (types II, III, and IV) (Atkin et al, 1986). With the exception of type IV (Xlinked adult, purely renal disease; McKusick [1992]), all are reported to have deafness as a characteristic trait. Although congenital, Alport syndrome usually presents as a preadolescent progressive sensory impairment affecting males and females in successive generations (McKusick, 1992). (See Wester [1995], for a comprehensive review of Alport syndrome in this special issue.) Two examples of variable onset are branchio-oto-renal syndrome (described in this special issue) and Klippel-Feil sequence, a primary skeletal abnormality with fused cervical vertebrae. Klippel-Feil sequence is considered to be a morphologically and etiologically heterogeneous disorder with five patterns and two modes of inheritance, autosomal recessive and autosomal dominant . It has been reported that between one quarter to one half present with associated sensory and/or conductive hearing loss that may be present at birth or delayed in its onset (Palant and Carter, 1972 ; Helmi and Pruzansky, 1980 ; Shaver et al, 1986 ; Stewart and O'Reilly, 1989). Anomalies include preauricular appendages, microtia, and stenosis or atresia of the EAC, whereas sensory pathology is attributed to a rudimentary cochlea, although syndromic dependent (Sando et al, 1990). The degree, severity, and acceleration of auditory erosion vary considerably in delayed hearing impairment, and its onset may be observed dur- Nosology of Deafness/Jacobson ing the neonatal or early childhood period (Bergstrom, 1984) . These examples of congenital conditions with delayed onset having hearing loss are generally the exception rather than the rule . Typically, infants with congenital syndromes have Table 3 auditory deficits that are identifiable at birth . Such an example is Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome, an autosomal-recessive hereditary condition that presents with cardiac abnormalities characterized by a prolonged Q-T electrocardiographic pattern. Although milder states of Classification System of Hearing Disorders by Type and Major System Dysfunction Craniofacial and Skeletal Disorders Nervous System Disorders Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders Sensory Hearing Loss Cleidocranial dysostosis-D Diastrophic dwarfism-D Marshall syndrome-D Townes syndrome-D Sensory Hearing Loss Cerebral palsy-R Muscular dystrophy-R Myoclonic epilepsy-R Noonan syndrome-D Richards-Rundel syndrome-R Sensory Hearing Loss Alstrom-R Hyperprolinemia I-D Iminoglycinuria-D Pendred syndrome-R Sickle cell anemia-D Conductive Hearing Loss Apert syndrome-D Branchio-oto-renal syndrome-D Carpenter syndrome-R Fanconi's anemia symdrome-R Goldenhar symdrome-R Madelung deformity-D Malformed, low-set ears-R Mohr syndrome-R Preauricular appendages-D Proximal symphalangism-D Symphalangism-D Sensory and/or Conductive Hearing Loss Achondroplasia-D Crouzon syndrome-D Karmondy-Feingold-D Klippel-Feil syndrome-R Marfan syndrome-D Myositis ossificans-D Otopalatodigital syndrome-X Pierre Robin sequence-D Pyle disease-D Stickler syndrome-D Treacher Collins syndrome-D Progressive Sensory and Delayed Onset Spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia van Buchem syndrome-R Progressive Sensory and/or Conductive Hearing Loss Albers-Schonberg disease-R Cockayne syndrome-R Englemann syndrome-D Osteogenesis imperfecta-D (types I-IV) Otosclerosis-D Paget disease-D Progressive Sensory and Delayed Onset Acoustic neuromas-D Friedreich ataxia-R Herrmann syndrome-D Myoclonic seizures-D Sensory radicular neuropathy-D Infantile muscular dystrophy-R Renal Disorders Conductive Hearing Loss Branch io-oto-renal-D Nephrosis, urinary tract malformations-X/R Oto-renal-genital syndrome-R Taylor syndrome-R Integumentary and Pigmentary Disorders Sensory Hearing Loss Albinism syndrome-R/X Congenital atopic dermatisis-R Ectodermal dysplasia-D Hypopigmentation-D Keratopachyderma-R Leopard syndrome-D Neurofibromatosis-D Onychodystrophy-R Partial albinism-X/R Pili torti-R Waardenburg syndrome-D Zinesser-Engman-Cole-X Conductive Hearing Loss Forney syndrome-D Miscellaneous Somatic Disorders Cardiovascular System Disorders Sensory Hearing Loss Trisomy 13-C Trisomy 18-C Sensory Hearing Loss Jervell and Lange-Nielsen-R Conductive Hearing Loss Turner syndrome-C Modified from Bergstrom et al, 1971 . R = autosomal recessive, D = autosomal dominant, X = X-linked, C = chromosomal . Sensory Progressive and Delayed Onset Alport syndrome-D Amyloidosis, nephritis, and urticaria-D Hyperprolinemia II-D Hyperuricemia-D Primary testicular deletion-X/R Progressive Sensory and/or Conductive Hearing Loss Hunter syndrome-X Hurler syndrome-R Eye Disorders Sensory Hearing Loss CHARGE Association Hallgren syndrome-R Laurence-Moon-Biedl syndrome-R Usher syndrome-R Conductive Hearing Loss Cryptophthalmia-R Duane retraction syndrome-D Okihiro syndrome-R Sensory and/or Conductive Hearing Loss Mobius syndrome-R Progressive Sensory and Delayed Onset Alstrom syndrome-R Cockayne syndrome-R Fehr corneal dystrophy-R Flynn-Aird syndrome-D Norrie syndrome-R Optic atrophy and diabetes mellitus-R Refsum syndrome-R Journal of the American Academy of Audiology/Volume 6, Number 1, January 1995 hearing sensitivity have been reported (Corcos et al, 1989), infants routinely present with congenital severe-to-profound bilateral sensory hearing loss . This disorder affects about 0.3 percent of the congenitally deaf with the cases of deafness representing 6 percent to 30 percent of all the patients with a prolonged Q-T pattern (Schwartz et al, 1975 ; Moss et al, 1985). Early identification through the use of electrocardiographic and auditory brainstem response screening has helped to identify this potentially lifethreatening condition (Jacobson et al, 1990b) . In all cases of congenital hereditary hearing loss that are identified, appropriate referral sources including genetic counseling must be strongly underscored. As early as 1971, Bergstrom and associates adapted a classification scheme based on congenital hearing loss, major system dysfunction, and type of auditory deficit, that is, conductive, sensory, mixed, and progressive. This complex myriad is similar to that fashioned by Konigsmark and Gorlin (1976; Table 2) and provides the added benefit of type of hearing loss as an additional descriptor. For example, a congenital "sensory" hearing loss with integumentary disorder includes Waardenburg syndrome, type I (with lateral displacement of the inner canthi) and type II (without dystopia), an autosomal-dominant pattern with variable expressivity (Arias, 1971). About half of type I families have been linked to chromosome 2q (Asher and Friedman, 1990 ; Table 4 Grundfast and San Agustin, 1992) . The frequency of sensory deafness is greater in type II (McKusick, 1992). Syndromes of congenital "conductive" hearing loss with craniofacial and skeletal disorders include Apert syndrome (autosomal dominant) and Goldenhar syndrome, a form of hemifacial microsomia including microtia and preauricular tags (Rollnick and Kaye, 1985). The latter is considered a form of heterogeneous inheritance including teratogenic, chromosomal anomalies and evidence that about 2 percent of the syndrome present as autosomal-dominant inheritance (Regenbogen et al, 1982). Finally, a "progressive" sensory hearing loss of delayed onset and nervous system disorder includes neurofibromatosis (autosomal dominant, types I and II ; see Pikus [19951, in this special issue) and Friedreich's ataxia (autosomal recessive) . This multifaceted classification system provides a complex yet precise method of describing auditory disorders and is illustrated in Table 3. Another method of classifying deafness was reported by Glasscock et al (1988) and is presented in Table 4. This eclectic approach synthesizes both onset and origin as follows: (1) congenital nongenetic, (2) congenital genetic, (3) delayed-onset nongenetic, and (4) delayed-onset genetic. Glasscock and colleagues reasoned that the use of origin (genetic versus nongenetic) descriptors independent of onset was confining since parents may not be aware of the specific familial hearing history, and only follow- Classification of Hearing Loss by Origin and Onset Congenital Nongenetic Congenital Genetic Delayed-Onset Nongenetic Hypothyroidism Hypoxia/anoxia Neonatal jaundice Ototoxicity Pierre Robin sequence Duane syndrome Radiation Rh incompatibility Rubella Syphilis Alpert syndrome Cockayne syndrome Chromosomal deficits Crouzon syndrome Meniere's disease Hallgren syndrome Jervell Lange-Nielsen Klippel-Feil sequence Leopard syndrome Mobius syndrome Oto-palatal-digital syndrome Noonan syndrome Pendred syndrome Refsum syndrome Sickle cell anemia Treacher Collins syndrome Turner syndrome Usher syndrome Waardenburg syndrome Wildervanck syndrome Acoustic neuroma Chronic otitis media Cytomegalovirous Fetal alcohol syndrome Juvenile hypothyroidism Meningitis Neoplastic disease Perilymph fistula Persistent pulmonary hypertension Pseudohypoacusis Trauma Tuberculosis Unknown Modified from Glasscock et al, 1988 . Delayed-Onset Genetic Alport syndrome Alstrom syndrome Branch io-oto-renal Crouzon syndrome Freidreich ataxia Hunter syndrome Hurler syndrome Laurence-Moon-Biedl Mucopolysaccharidoses Noorie syndrome Neurofibromatoses II Neurofibromatoses II Osteogenesis imperfecta I Otosclerosis Pyle disease Nosology of Deafness/Jacobson ing the detection of family members or affected offspring would the nature of the genetic hearing loss be accurately identified . Conversely, using only onset as the exclusive method of classification is also self-constraining, that is, infants born severely physically compromised are often too ill and/or neurologically premature to be screened for hearing loss prior to hospital discharge. Frequently, these same infants are released from the hospital with potentially unrecognized auditory deficits . In such cases in which hearing impairment is eventually recognized, hearing loss may have been truly congenital but undetected. Thus, auditory disorders tend to be lost in the larger picture of morbidity and, subsequently, deafness and/or hearing loss when discovered may be misclassified as acquired . The value of this four-component interactive classification system is simplicity. Finally, Jones (1988) ascribes to a genetic classification system that uses recognizable patterns of malformation . Each anomaly includes syndromes in which defects are listed as either the frequent or occasional feature. Two categories pertinent to this discussion are deafness and external ears (low-set ears, malformed auricles, and preauricular tags or pits). For a catalogue of this application, see Hall et al (1995) in this special issue, specifically Table 2. SUMMARY t is beyond the expectations of any hearing health care professional to commit to memory every auditory disorder that causes hearing loss . Suffice it to say that this article is intended to provide only a brief introduction to the nosology of deafness and hearing loss . The listing of various classification schemes found within the tables contained in this article should not be considered inclusive but rather as a quick reference to be used as a first, not primary, source of information. It is important to recognize that many books and articles are currently available that provide specific details regarding auditory deficits, their origin, and onset. The reader is encouraged to review several excellent sources, including Pediatric Otolaryngology (Bluestone and Stool, 1990), Syndromes of the Head and Neck (Gorlin et al, 1990), Smith's Recognizable Patterns ofHuman Malformations (Jones, 1988), and Mendelian Inheritance in Man (McKusick, 1992). As our knowledge of new technology in human genetics improves, so will our ability to diagnose and manage inherited syndromes and other auditory deficits in infants and children . 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