OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to describe the performance of a cochlear implant in a patient with profound hearing loss with the A1555G mitochondrial mutation. SETTING: The study was conducted at two university hospitals. PATIENT: A 50-year-old Japanese man in whom bilateral profound hearing loss developed after administration of streptomycin at the age of 23 participated. The pedigree of the family showed exclusively maternal transmission of hearing impairment. INTERVENTION: Genetic study and auditory rehabilitation with a cochlear implant were performed. RESULTS: The A1555G point mutation was identified from the patient's mitochondrial DNA. Since activation of the implant, the patient has been using it successfully with a monosyllable recognition score of 78% using Japanese word lists for speech audiometry. CONCLUSIONS: The current case indicated that cochlear implantation may be a valuable choice of therapy for the patient with profound hearing loss with the A1555G mutation. The excellent auditory performance with a cochlear implant suggests that hearing loss associated with this mutation is primarily caused by insult to the cochlear tissue containing rich mitochondria (i.e., hair cells or stria vascularis or both), not to the cochlear nerve and its central connections.
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to describe the performance of a cochlear implant in a patient with profound hearing loss with the A1555G mitochondrial mutation. SETTING: The study was conducted at two university hospitals. PATIENT: A 50-year-old Japanese man in whom bilateral profound hearing loss developed after administration of streptomycin at the age of 23 participated. The pedigree of the family showed exclusively maternal transmission of hearing impairment. INTERVENTION: Genetic study and auditory rehabilitation with a cochlear implant were performed. RESULTS: The A1555G point mutation was identified from the patient's mitochondrial DNA. Since activation of the implant, the patient has been using it successfully with a monosyllable recognition score of 78% using Japanese word lists for speech audiometry. CONCLUSIONS: The current case indicated that cochlear implantation may be a valuable choice of therapy for the patient with profound hearing loss with the A1555G mutation. The excellent auditory performance with a cochlear implant suggests that hearing loss associated with this mutation is primarily caused by insult to the cochlear tissue containing rich mitochondria (i.e., hair cells or stria vascularis or both), not to the cochlear nerve and its central connections.
Authors: S Usami; S Abe; J Akita; A Namba; H Shinkawa; M Ishii; S Iwasaki; T Hoshino; J Ito; K Doi; T Kubo; T Nakagawa; S Komiyama; T Tono; S Komune Journal: J Med Genet Date: 2000-01 Impact factor: 6.318
Authors: Richard J Vivero; Kenneth Fan; Simon Angeli; Thomas J Balkany; Xue Z Liu Journal: Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol Date: 2010-07-22 Impact factor: 1.675
Authors: Sumit Parikh; Russell Saneto; Marni J Falk; Irina Anselm; Bruce H Cohen; Richard Haas; The Mitochondrial Medicine Society Journal: Curr Treat Options Neurol Date: 2009-11 Impact factor: 3.598
Authors: Sharen E McKay; Wayne Yan; Jessica Nouws; Maximilian J Thormann; Nuno Raimundo; Abdul Khan; Joseph Santos-Sacchi; Lei Song; Gerald S Shadel Journal: Am J Pathol Date: 2015-11-06 Impact factor: 4.307