| Literature DB >> 34912757 |
Abdoulaye Yalcouyé1,2, Oumou Traoré1, Abdoulaye Taméga1, Alassane B Maïga1, Fousseyni Kané1, Oluwafemi G Oluwole2, Cheick Oumar Guinto1,3, Mohamed Kéita1,4, Samba Karim Timbo1,4, Carmen DeKock2, Guida Landouré1,3, Ambroise Wonkam2,5.
Abstract
Objectives: To identify the etiologies of hearing impairment (HI) in schools for students who are deaf and to use a systematic review to summarize reports on the etiologies and clinical and genetic features of HI in Mali.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; Mali; etiology; genetics; hearing impairment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34912757 PMCID: PMC8667071 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2021.726776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Sociodemographic, phenotypic expression, and causes of HI.
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| Socio-demographics | Age (years) | Median (range): 12 (3–37) | ||
| Sex | Male | 65 (55.5) | ||
| Female | 52 (45.5) | |||
| HI phenotypes | Onset | Pre-lingual | 96 (82.2) | |
| Post-lingual | 21 (17.8) | |||
| Type | Sensorineural | 49 (80.7) | ||
| Conductive | 3 (4.6) | |||
| Mixed | 9 (14.7) | |||
| HI causes | Environmental | Meningitis | 28 (40) | |
| Chronic otitis | 13 (18.6) | |||
| Low birth weight | 11 (15.7) | |||
| Other | 18 (25.7) | |||
| Likely genetics | Clinical expression | Syndromic | 15 (83.3) | |
| Non-syndromic | 3 (16.7) | |||
| Likely inheritance pattern | Autosomal recessive | 15 (83.3) | ||
| Autosomal dominant | 1 (5.6) | |||
| Sporadic | 2 (11.1) | |||
| Consanguinity rate | 10 (55.5) | |||
| Unknown | 13 (11.3) |
HI, hearing impairment.
Other = Ototoxic medications, congenital infection, and neonatal asphyxia.
Figure 1Clinical profiles. (A) Audiogram of a patient showing a bilateral and profound sensorineural hearing impairment (blue is the left side and red is the right side). (B) Diagram of the etiologies of hearing impairment in Mali. (C,D) Photos of patients with Waardenburg syndrome type 1 with dystopia canthorum (red arrow), and type 2 without dystopia canthorum (red arrow). (E) Photo of a patient with congenital microtia-deafness syndrome showing a right side microtia (black circle). (F,G) Pedigree of the families showing an autosomal recessive and autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance (asterisks represent individuals seen in clinic, numbers on the left are ages, and the arrow shows the proband).
Characteristics of studies included in the literature review.
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| Mohamed et al. ( | Urban | Bamako | School for the deaf | Cross-sectional cases series | 30 (65.2) | 11 | 5–19 | 46 | NR | Meningitis | PTA |
| Traoré et al. ( | Urban | Bamako | Hospital | Case report | 0 | 1.6 | NA | 1 | NR | NI | PTA |
| Imperato and Imperato ( | Rural | Bougouni | Community | Case report | 1 (100) | 13 | NA | 1 | NR | NI | NA |
| Traoré et al. ( | Urban | Bamako | Hospital | Case report | 1 (100) | 33 | NA | 1 | NR | Toxic | PTA |
| Sako ( | Urban | Bamako | Community | Cross-sectional cases series | NR | NR | 10–60 | 147 | NR | Meningitis | PTA |
| Baba ( | Urban | Bamako | Hospital | Cross-sectional cases series | 533 (64) | 6 | 0–15 | 833 | NR | Meningitis | PTA |
| Diarra et al. ( | Urban | Bamako | Hospital | Cross-sectional cases series | 120 (60) | 37.2 | 15–83 | 200 | NR | NR | PTA |
| Sacko et al. ( | Urban | Bamako | Community | Cross-sectional cases series | 68 (100) | 32 | 30–55 | 68 | NR | Noise | PTA |
| This study | Urban | Bamako | School for the deaf | Cross sectional case series | 65 (55.6) | 7 | 4–21 | 117 | NR | Meningitis | PTA |
NR, not reported; NI, not identified; NA, not applicable; PTA, pure tone audiometry.
Figure 2Map of Mali showing the regions where the studies in this review were performed. The geographical representation of HI studies in Mali to date.