| Literature DB >> 34993346 |
Oluwafemi Gabriel Oluwole1, Kili James1, Abdoulaye Yalcouye1, Ambroise Wonkam1.
Abstract
Several causative factors are associated with hearing loss (HL) and brain disorders. However, there are many unidentified disease modifiers in these conditions. Our study summarised the most common brain disorders associated with HL and highlighted mechanisms of pathologies. We searched the literature for published articles on HL and brain disorders. Alzheimer's disease/dementia, Parkinson's disease, cognitive impairment, autism spectrum disorder, ataxia, epilepsy, stroke, and hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy majorly co-interact with HL. The estimated incidence rate was 113 per 10,000 person-years. Genetic, epigenetic, early life/neonatal stress, hypoxia, inflammation, nitric oxide infiltration, endoplasmic reticulum stress, and excess glutamate were the distinguished modifiers identified. Various mechanisms like adhesion molecules, transport proteins, hair cell apoptosis, and neurodegeneration have been implicated in these conditions and are serving as potential targets for therapies. To improve the quality of life of patients, these understandings will improve clinical diagnoses and management of HL and brain disorders.Entities:
Keywords: brain disorders; correlated risk factors; hearing loss; pathology
Year: 2021 PMID: 34993346 PMCID: PMC8678477 DOI: 10.1515/med-2021-0402
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Med (Wars)
Studies on brain disorders and hearing loss
| Type of diseases | Methods | Major findings | Total number of cases | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer's disease (AD) and dementia | Studies that performed PTA, ABR, and central auditory processing tests on participants diagnosed with dementia/AD. Patients were compared with control groups | There was a significant association between central auditory dysfunction and dementia/AD in the primary auditory cortex with evidence of abnormal blood glucose levels | 1,045 | [ |
| Studies that performed longitudinal research on patients diagnosed with sensorineural HL and investigated association with dementia in participants | During the average 5 year follow-up period, the incidence rate of dementia in the sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) cohort was 6.5 per 1,000 person-years compared with 5.09 per 10,000 person-years in the comparison group. HL was independently associated with a high incident rate of dementia in mild, moderate, and severe HL | 17,523 | [ | |
| Parkinson's disease (PD) | Assessments of HL were evaluated in PD patients with audiometric testing, and a battery of central auditory processing tests | Compared to the control group, PD patients reported greater HL | 184 | [ |
| Cognitive impairment | Patients diagnosed with HL were recruited for the study and completed the modified Mini-Mental State Examination, cognitive test, and linear mixed models for correlation | About one-sixth (15.7%) of the patients studied had cognitive decline; 10.1% had functional decline among individuals with HL. There was also an association with history of stroke | 5,445 | [ |
| Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) | Audiological evaluation was performed using PTA tests in children diagnosed with autism | Mild-to-moderate HL was diagnosed in 7.9% and unilateral HL in 1.6%, profound bilateral HL was diagnosed in 3.5% of all cases | 199 | [ |
| Epilepsy and ataxia | A retrospective review of the detailed neurological and neuroradiological features were performed in nine children | All children presented with tonic–clonic seizures in infancy. Later, with non-progressive, cerebellar ataxia and profound HL | 9 children, 1 adult | [ |
| Hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy (HLE) | Dual-stage hearing screening tests, including automated otoacoustic emissions and ABR tests, were performed in new-borns suspected to have developed HL | The study affirms a significant association between HL in term infants who have moderate/severe HLE with evidence of abnormal blood glucose and multi-organ dysfunction ( | 42 | [ |
| Stroke | Neurological and general examinations were performed. Followed by audiogram and MRI screening | Acute stress was recognised and moderate sensorineural HL with the presence of bilateral temporal ischemic stroke lesions | 1 | [ |
Figure 1Filtering processes and article selections in the study.
Figure 2The description of intrinsic, extrinsic factors and disease modifiers underlying the pathologies of HL co-interactions with brain disorders.
Epigenetic studies involving HL and brain disorders genes
| Methylated genes | Brain disorders | Proposed mechanisms | Associated SNPs/mutations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Autism, cerebellar ataxia, Huntington disease | DNMT1 negatively impacts retrograde trafficking and autophagy | rs10418707, rs10423341, rs2114724, and rs759920 | [ |
|
| AD, and intellectual disability syndrome | Most of the mutations identified are predicted to disrupt the reading frame in a way that causes early translational termination and/or activates non-sense-mediated decay | Multiple mutations have been reported including the c.2314delG, c.2362C > T, c.5296C > A | [ |
|
| Ataxia | Enhanced nuclear H3K27me3 affects cell cycle and neuronal survival through reverse transcription mechanisms and complexes | Ser652 and Ser734 sites methylation | [39] |
|
| Intellectual disability, schizophrenia, and psychosis, autism, PD, and HD | The addition of methyl groups to histone H3 lysine 9 linked to genomic imprinting, X-inactivation, and heterochromatin formation | Multiple H3K9 dimethylation has been reported | [40] |
|
| Kabuki syndrome (intellectual disability) and multiple malformations syndrome | Methylation leads to the truncation of C-terminal SET catalytic domain, likely resulting in the loss of enzymatic function | Multiple mutations have been reported including the p.Cys1430Arg and p.Cys1471Tyr | [41–43] |
|
| ASD and sleep disorder | Mechanisms not fully understood but were thought to control glia activation and causes hyperserotonemia | Multiple mutations have been reported in non-human subjects | [44] |
Figure 3A description of auditory signal pathway and possible insults to the auditory nervous system. The auditory nervous pathway originates from spiral ganglion cells in the cochlea. The pathological changes that occur in the cochlear, like inflammation can initiate peripheral immune responses and activations of inflammatory genes as well as over production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and other inflammatory biomarkers that can affect the mitochondrial and diffuses to the central nervous system to cause neurodegeneration and cell apoptosis. Also, mtDNA mutations can cause mitochondrial dysfunction and cell apoptosis.