نتایج جستجو برای: syndromic sporadic hearing loss

تعداد نتایج: 510174  

Journal: :Clinical genetics 2012
G Borck L Rainshtein S Hellman-Aharony A E Volk K Friedrich E Taub N Magal M Kanaan C Kubisch M Shohat L Basel-Vanagaite

Autosomal-recessive non-syndromic hearing impairment (DFNB) is usually of prelingual onset with a moderate to profound degree of hearing loss. More than 70 DFNB loci have been mapped and ~40 causative genes have been identified. Non-syndromic hearing impairment caused by mutations of DFNB59 (encoding pejvakin) has been described in a couple of families in which affected individuals presented wi...

Journal: :Journal of basic and clinical physiology and pharmacology 2002
Abraham Goldfarb Karen B Avraham

Genetic research into the causes of deafness has advanced considerably in the last years. Progress has been made in both discovering loci and cloning genes associated with syndromic and non-syndromic hearing loss. To date, close to 75 loci have been identified and 29 genes have been cloned for non-syndromic deafness. The proteins these genes encode range from transcription factors to molecular ...

Journal: :Journal of medical genetics 2001
M J Houseman A P Jackson L I Al-Gazali R A Badin E Roberts R F Mueller

EDITOR—Around 1 in 1000 children is born or presents in early childhood with a severe hearing impairment. 2 In developed countries, approximately 50% of these cases are attributed to genetic causes and the majority are non-syndromic with an autosomal recessive mode of transmission. Childhood onset nonsyndromic sensorineural hearing loss (NSSNHL) is almost exclusively monogenic. This has facilit...

2014
QINJUN WEI YOUGUO LIU SHUAI WANG TINGTING LIU YAJIE LU GUANGQIAN XING XIN CAO

Mutations in the GJB2 gene are responsible for up to 50% of cases of non-syndromic recessive hearing loss, with c.35delG, c.167delT and c.235delC being the predominant mutations in many world populations. However, a large number of rare mutations in this gene may also contribute to hearing loss. The aim of the present study was to conduct a clinical and molecular characterization of a Chinese f...

2016
Hong Wu Yong Feng Lu Jiang Qian Pan Yalan Liu Chang Liu Chufeng He Hongsheng Chen Xueming Liu Chang Hu Yiqiao Hu Lingyun Mei

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to evaluate the GoldenGate microarray as a diagnostic tool and to elucidate the contribution of the genes on this array to the development of both nonsyndromic and syndromic sensorineural hearing loss in China. METHODS We developed a microarray to detect 240 mutations underlying syndromic and nonsyndromic sensorineural hearing loss. The microarray was then ...

2017
Nobuko Yamamoto Hideki Mutai Kazunori Namba Noriko Morita Shin Masuda Yasuyuki Nishi Atsuko Nakano Sawako Masuda Masato Fujioka Kimitaka Kaga Kaoru Ogawa Tatsuo Matsunaga

BACKGROUND To date, 102 genes have been reported as responsible for non-syndromic hearing loss, some of which are associated with specific audiogram features. Four genes have been reported as causative for mid-frequency sensorineural hearing loss (MFSNHL), among which TECTA is the most frequently reported; however, the prevalence of TECTA mutations is unknown. To elucidate the prevalence of TEC...

Journal: :Journal of medical genetics 2000
D M Martin F J Probst S A Camper E M Petty

BACKGROUND Hereditary forms of hearing loss are classified as syndromic, when deafness is associated with other clinical features, or non-syndromic, when deafness occurs without other clinical features. Many types of syndromic deafness have been described, some of which have been mapped to specific chromosomal regions. METHODS Here we describe a family with progressive sensorineural hearing l...

Journal: :Journal of medical genetics 2003
S Naz F Alasti A Mowjoodi S Riazuddin M H Sanati T B Friedman A J Griffith E R Wilcox

Genetic factors are thought to account for approximately one half of cases of childhood hearing loss, the majority of which is non-syndromic and not associated with other abnormalities. Seventy-seven percent of hereditary, non-syndromic, prelingual deafness is autosomal recessive, 22% is autosomal dominant, and 1% is transmitted as a matrilineal or X linked trait. So far, more than 30 distinct ...

Journal: :iranian journal of public health 0
habib onsori dept. of genetics, marand branch, islamic azad university, marand, iran. mohammad rahmati dept. of clinical biochemistry, faculty of medicine, tabriz university of medical sciences, tabriz, iran. davood fazli dept. of biology, payame noor university (pnu), tehran, iran.

mutations in the gjb2 gene are the most common known cause of hereditary congenital hearing loss. rapid genomic dna extraction (rgde) method was used for genomic dna extraction. after amplification of coding region of cx26 gene with specific primers, expected pcr products with 724bp length were subjected to direct sequencing in both directions. we describe here a novel heterozygous -t to -c tra...

2016
Somayeh Reiisi Mohammad Amin Tabatabaiefar Mohammad Hosein Sanati Morteza Hashemzadeh Chaleshtori

OBJECTIVES Non-syndromic sensorineural hearing loss (NSHL) is a common disorder affecting approximately 1 in 500 newborns. This type of hearing loss is extremely heterogeneous and includes over 100 loci. Mutations in the GJB2 gene have been implicated in about half of autosomal recessive non-syndromic hearing loss (ARNSHL) cases, making this the most common cause of ARNSHL. For the latter form ...

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