| Literature DB >> 22567374 |
Joseph P Pillion1, David Vernick, Jay Shapiro.
Abstract
Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is the most common heritable disorder of connective tissue. It is associated with fractures following relatively minor injury, blue sclerae, dentinogenesis imperfecta, increased joint mobility, short stature, and hearing loss. Structures in the otic capsule and inner ear share in the histologic features common to other skeletal tissues. OI is due to mutations involving several genes, the most commonly involved are the COL1A1 or COL1A2 genes which are responsible for the synthesis of the proalpha-1 and proalpha-2 polypeptide chains that form the type I collagen triple helix. A genotype/phenotype relationship to hearing loss has not been established in OI. Hearing loss is commonly found in OI with prevalence rates ranging from 50 to 92% in some studies. Hearing loss in OI may be conductive, mixed, or sensorineural and is more common by the second or third decade. Treatment options such as hearing aids, stapes surgery, and cochlear implants are discussed.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22567374 PMCID: PMC3335494 DOI: 10.4061/2011/983942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Res Int ISSN: 2090-3162
Types of osteogenesis imperfecta (adapted from [18]).
| Type | Inheritance** | Clinical | Incidence++ | Mutations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | AD | Mild, blue sclerae fractures with little or no deformity hearing loss, DI | 60% | Type I collagen |
| II | AD, AR | Lethal, pulmonary insufficiency, beaded ribs, rhizomelic hearing loss | 10% | Type I collagen |
| III | AD, AR | Progressive deforming intrauterine fractures, deformed limbs, scoliosis white or blue sclerae hearing loss, DI | 10% | Type I collagen |
| IV | AD | Moderately severe, limb deformity, sclerae blue early and lighten with age scoliosis | 15% | Type I collagen |
| V | AD | Variable phenotype like IV hyperplastic callus, dislocated radial head calcified interosseous membrane | 5% | Unknown |
| VI | unknown | More fractures than IV mineralization defect on biopsy, vertebral fractures, no DI | Unknown | Type I collagen |
| VII | AR | First nations family, Quebec | ++ | CRTAP, LEPRE1, PPIB (prolyl-3 hydroxylation) |
| congenital fractures white sclerae, severe rhizomelia | ||||
| VIII | AR | Severe or lethal similar to OI type II (Sillence) | ++ | CRTAP, LEPRE1 SERPINH1 |
**AD = autosomal dominant.
**AR = autosomal recessive.
++: the incidence of OI types I–IV is reasonably established. However, for the less common types, OI types VI, VII, and VIII, the incidence is not clearly defined. However, it is estimated that the recessively inherited forms (VII and VIII) constitute approximately 3–5% of the total OI population.
Results of stapedectomy in people with and without OI. Findings depict the number of cases, percent of patients with postoperation air-bone gap of less than 10 dB HL, and percent of patients with postoperation hearing loss.
| Cases | Post-op air bone gap <10 dB | Post-op sensorineural hearing loss | |
|---|---|---|---|
| OI series | |||
| Garretsen and Cremers [ | 40 | 78 | 1.7 |
| Shea and Postma [ | 51 | 75 | 8 |
| Ferekidis et al.[ | 9 | 75 | 0 |
| Vincent et al.[ | 21 | 85.7 | 0 |
|
| |||
| Non-OI series | |||
| Vincent et al. [ | 2525 | 94.2 | 0.7 |