Abstract
We report a case of type I Waardenburg's syndrome that provides insight into the etiopathogenesis of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) in this syndrome. The subject, a 76-year-old woman with type I Waardenburg's syndrome (dystopia canthorum, heterochromia irides, and white hair), had congenital low-frequency SNHL in her right ear only, which had remained relatively stable throughout her life. Blood leukocyte DNA studies revealed a PAX-3 mutation with a 1 base pair C-to-A substitution in exon 5 at base 602. Light microscopic studies of the right cochlea showed intact neurosensory structures in only the lower basal turn, with the remainder of the cochlea showing absence of melanocytes, absence of stria vascularis, missing hair cells, dysmorphogenesis of the tectorial membrane, and lack of peripheral processes of the spiral ganglion cells. There was pathological alteration of the vestibular dark cells with marked reduction of melanocytes associated with these dark cells. The left inner ear was normal, with a full complement of neurosensory structures, including melanocytes. Because the PAX-3 gene is involved in neural crest development and melanocytes migrate from the neural crest to the ear, the findings in this case are consistent with the hypothesis that defective melanocyte migration or defective melanocyte function results in defective development of the stria vascularis (and perhaps other structures of the ear). leading to SNHL.
Subject
General Medicine,Otorhinolaryngology
Cited by
21 articles.
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