Congenital ectodermal dysplasia with hearing loss
Overview
A rare syndrome characterized by nerve deafness, abnormally bent fifth fingers, ectodermal dysplasia and scoliosis.
Symptoms
Symptoms includes:
- Abnormal hair quantity
- Camptodactyly of finger
- Short stature
- Arachnodactyly
- Carious teeth
- Coarse hair
- Cognitive impairment
- Hyperkeratosis
- Kyphosis
- Scoliosis
Causes
Infections –CMV:
Most common intrauterine infection causing hearing loss –Bacterial meningitis –Congenital rubella: Cataracts, cardiovascular anomalies, retinitis, mental retardation –Congenital syphilis –Toxoplasmosis –Lyme disease
Metabolic –Hyperbilirubinemia (kernicterus):
Consider phototherapy or exchange transfusion if serum bilirubin >20 mg/dL in newborn –Hypercholesterolemia
Ototoxic medications.
Aminoglycoside, gentamicin often needed for perinatal sepsis; >5 days risks hearing loss
Temporal bone anomaly.
Middle ear anomaly (results in conductive hearing loss), Perilymphatic fistula, Dilated vestibular aqueduct (±Mondini deformity), Michel cochlear aplasia –Scheibe aplasia: Membranous aplasia; bony labyrinth normal
Nonsyndromic hereditary congenital deafness (connexin 26 gene mutation is responsible for half of all genetic deafness)
Syndromic hereditary congenital deafness:
Waardenburg: Telecanthus, confluent eyebrow, colored irides, white forlock
Usher: Retinitis pigmentosa (totally blind by second to third decade), ataxia, vestibular dysfunction
Alport: Progressive nephritis and hearing loss
Apert (acrocephalosyndactyly): Craniofacial dysostosis –Crouzon (craniofacial dysostosis): Prognathic mandibile, small maxilla
Jervell and Lange-Neilsen: Heart disease (prolonged QT interval)
Pendred: Euthyroid goiter
Oto-palatal-digital: Cleft palate, stubby clubbed digits –Congential aural atresia
Treatment
- Identify children with hearing loss early
- Treat medically treatable cause, if any –Syphilis (steroids and penicillin), Lyme disease, toxoplasmosis, hypercholesterolemia
- Intravenous gancyclovir for congenital CMV
- Habilitate by age 6 months if possible, Amplification, Bone-anchored hearing aids, Tympanostomy tube placement, Middle ear reconstruction Perilymphatic fistula closure, Cochlear implant (after age 12 months)
- Periodic follow-up necessary:
- Ensure auditory habilitation is working
- Check for hearing loss progression