| Literature DB >> 23691387 |
João Queirós1, Sofia Maia, Mariana Seca, António Friande, Maria Araújo, Angelina Meireles.
Abstract
Background. Cogan's syndrome is a rare clinical entity whose etiopathology is still unknown, and the treatment strategies are not clearly defined. Case. A 23-year-old male presented with symptoms of headache, peripheral facial palsy, persistent right hearing loss and bilateral papillitis. Workup excluded all infectious, granulomatous, neoplastic, and immune causes. The diagnosis of atypical Cogan's syndrome was established, and the patient was treated with systemic corticosteroids and later on with cyclophosphamide and methotrexate. There were improvement of visual symptoms and stabilisation of left hearing. Conclusion. Cogan's syndrome is a very rare disease with no specific biological tests for the diagnosis. The diagnostic exams are mostly important to exclude other etiologies. The atypical ocular and audiovestibular manifestations make the diagnosis difficult, delaying the institution of appropriate therapy which may result in profound bilateral deafness.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23691387 PMCID: PMC3638509 DOI: 10.1155/2013/476527
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Ophthalmol Med
Figure 1Retinography showing mild hyperemia of both optic discs.
Figure 2Audiogram showing complete hearing loss of right ear and no significant alterations of left ear.
Figure 3Evolution of right and left audiograms. There is complete right hearing loss from the beginning. Initially, the left ear audiogram was normal (a), (b), but the patient started to develop hearing loss at 4000 Hz frequency (audiogram (c)). (d) and (e) show recovering of left hearing after treatment.
Differential diagnosis of Cogan's syndrome.
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