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Genetic Hearing Impairment : Its Clinical Presentations., PDF eBook

Genetic Hearing Impairment : Its Clinical Presentations. PDF

Edited by Cremers, Smith

PDF

Please note: eBooks can only be purchased with a UK issued credit card and all our eBooks (ePub and PDF) are DRM protected.

Description

A decade of innovative findings in the research of molecular biology of hearing and deafness is reflected in this volume.

The genetic causes for many types of syndromic and non-syndromic deafness are identified and genotypic-phenotypic relationships are explored.

Although the type and degree of deafness caused by mutations in different genes significantly overlap, relatively unique age-related audiometric profiles are also emerging.

For example, the audioprofile of DFNA1 and DFNA6-14 is a low-frequency sensorineural hearing loss; with DFNA8-14 it is a mid-frequency sensorineural hearing loss, and with DFNA2, DFNA5 and DFNA20-26 it is a high-frequency progressive hearing loss.

Recognizing such audioprofiles can facilitate well-guided decision-making in clinical practice and can direct genetic testing for deafness.

With an accurate genetic diagnosis, prognostic information can be provided to patients and their families.

In the future, gene-specific habilitation options may also become available. To keep up to date with new clinical standards of diagnosing genetic hearing impairment, this book is indispensable reading to otorhinolaryngologists and audiologists.

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