Rare Diseases Symptoms Automatic Extraction
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SOX10 mutations mimic isolated hearing loss.
[kallmann syndrome]
Ninety
genes
have
been
identified
to
date
that
are
involved
in
non-syndromic
hearing
loss
,
and
more
than
300
different
forms
of
syndromic
hearing
impairment
have
been
described
.
Mutations
in
SOX
10
,
one
of
the
genes
contributing
to
syndromic
hearing
loss
,
induce
a
large
range
of
phenotypes
,
including
several
subtypes
of
Waardenburg
syndrome
and
Kallmann
syndrome
with
deafness
.
In
addition
,
rare
mutations
have
been
identified
in
patients
with
isolated
signs
of
these
diseases
.
We
used
the
recent
characterization
of
temporal
bone
imaging
aspects
in
patients
with
SOX
10
mutations
to
identify
possible
patients
with
isolated
hearing
loss
due
to
SOX
10
mutation
.
We
selected
21
patients
with
isolated
deafness
and
temporal
bone
morphological
defects
for
mutational
screening
.
We
identified
two
SOX
10
mutations
and
found
that
both
resulted
in
a
non-
functional
protein
in
vitro
.
Re-evaluation
of
the
two
affected
patients
showed
that
both
had
previously
undiagnosed
olfactory
defects
.
Diagnosis
of
anosmia
or
hyposmia
in
young
children
is
challenging
,
and
particularly
in
the
absence
of
magnetic
resonance
imaging
(
MRI
)
,
SOX
10
mutations
can
mimic
non-syndromic
hearing
impairment
.
MRI
should
complete
temporal
bones
computed
tomographic
scan
in
the
management
of
congenital
deafness
as
it
can
detect
brain
anomalies
,
cochlear
nerve
defects
,
and
olfactory
bulb
malformation
in
addition
to
inner
ear
malformations
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"non-syndromic hearing loss"
symptom
kallmann syndrome
pendred syndrome
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