Uma doença do ouvido interno (labirinto) que se caracteriza por perda de audição que varia (vai e vem) e afeta o nervo e as células sensoriais do ouvido; zumbido; crises de vertigem; e sensação de ouvido cheio. É a forma mais comum de acúmulo de líquido no ouvido interno (hidropsia endolinfática).
Introdução
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Uma doença do ouvido interno (labirinto) que se caracteriza por perda de audição que varia (vai e vem) e afeta o nervo e as células sensoriais do ouvido; zumbido; crises de vertigem; e sensação de ouvido cheio. É a forma mais comum de acúmulo de líquido no ouvido interno (hidropsia endolinfática).
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Publicações mais relevantes
French protocol for diagnosis and management of Cogan's syndrome.
Cogan's syndrome is a condition of unknown origin, classified as a systemic vasculitis. It is characterised by a predilection for the cornea and the inner ear. It mainly affects Caucasian individuals with a sex-ratio close to one. Ophthalmological and cochleo-vestibular involvement are the most common manifestations of the disease. The most frequent ophthalmological type of involvement is non-syphilitic interstitial keratitis. Cochleo-vestibular manifestations are similar to those of Meniere's syndrome. The disease progresses in ocular and ear-nose-throat (ENT) flares, which may occur simultaneously or in isolation. Association with other autoimmune diseases, particularly other forms of vasculitis such as polyarteritis nodosa or Takayasu's arteritis, is possible. Ocular involvement, as well as cochleo-vestibular involvement, can be inaugural and initially isolated. Onset is often abrupt. The characteristic involvement is "non-syphilitic" interstitial keratitis. It is usually bilateral from the outset or becomes so during the course of the disease. It presents as a red, painful eye, possibly associated with decreased visual acuity. Cochleo-vestibular involvement is usually bilateral from the outset. It is characterised by the sudden onset of continuous rotational vertigo associated with tinnitus, rapidly progressive sensorineural deafness. Approximately 30-70% of patients present with systemic manifestations. Deterioration in general status with fever may be present. Laboratory evidence of inflammatory syndrome is associated in 75% of cases. Cogan's syndrome is a presumed autoimmune type of vasculitis, although no specific autoantibodies have been identified. Ocular involvement is usually associated with a good prognosis, with total visual acuity recovery in the majority of cases. In contrast, cochleo-vestibular involvement can be severe and irreversible. Therapeutic management of Cogan's syndrome, given its rarity, lacks consensus since no prospective randomised studies have been conducted to date. Corticosteroid therapy is the first-line treatment. Combination with anti-TNF therapy should be promptly discussed.
An overload of missense variants in the OTOG gene may drive a higher prevalence of familial Meniere disease in the European population.
Meniere disease is a complex inner ear disorder with significant familial aggregation. A differential prevalence of familial MD (FMD) has been reported, being 9-10% in Europeans compared to 6% in East Asians. A broad genetic heterogeneity in FMD has been described, OTOG being the most common mutated gene, with a compound heterozygous recessive inheritance. We hypothesize that an OTOG-related founder effect may explain the higher prevalence of FMD in the European population. Therefore, the present study aimed to compare the allele frequency (AF) and distribution of OTOG rare variants across different populations. For this purpose, the coding regions with high constraint (low density of rare variants) were retrieved in the OTOG coding sequence in Non-Finnish European (NFE).. Missense variants (AF < 0.01) were selected from a 100 FMD patient cohort, and their population AF was annotated using gnomAD v2.1. A linkage analysis was performed, and odds ratios were calculated to compare AF between NFE and other populations. Thirteen rare missense variants were observed in 13 FMD patients, with 2 variants (rs61978648 and rs61736002) shared by 5 individuals and another variant (rs117315845) shared by two individuals. The results confirm the observed enrichment of OTOG rare missense variants in FMD. Furthermore, eight variants were enriched in the NFE population, and six of them were in constrained regions. Structural modeling predicts five missense variants that could alter the otogelin stability. We conclude that several variants reported in FMD are in constraint regions, and they may have a founder effect and explain the burden of FMD in the European population.
Whole-exome sequencing suggests multiallelic inheritance for childhood-onset Ménière's disease.
The genetic background of Ménière's disease (MD) was studied in one patient with childhood-onset MD and his grandfather affected with middle age-onset MD. Whole-exome sequencing was performed and the data were compared to 76 exomes from unrelated subjects without MD. Thirteen rare inner ear expressed variants with pathogenic estimations were observed in the case of childhood-onset MD. These variants were in genes involved in the formation of cell membranes or the cytoskeleton and in genes participating in cell death or gene-regulation pathways. His grandfather shared two of the variants: p.Y273N in HMX2 and p.L229F in TMEM55B. HMX2 p.Y273N was considered the more likely candidate for MD, as the gene is known to affect both hearing and vestibular function. The variant in the HMX2 gene may affect inner ear development and structural integrity and thus might predispose to the onset of MD. As there was a significant difference in onset between the patients, an accumulation of defects in several pathways is probably responsible for the exceptionally early onset of the disease, and the genetic etiology of childhood-onset MD is most likely multifactorial. This is the first molecular genetic study of childhood-onset MD.
COGAN'S SYNDROME.
The objective of our study was to review the current knowledge on Cogan's syndrome, including etiology, diagnosis and treatment. Systematic review methodology: Relevant publications on Cogan's syndrome from 1945 to 2014 were studied. Cogan's syndrome is a rare autoimmune vasculitis, with unknown pathogenesis. Infection was thought to have played a role in the pathogenesis of the disease, but now the autoimmunity hypothesis is considered more likely to be true. Cogan's syndrome is characterized by ocular and audiovestibular symptoms similar to those of Meniere's syndrome. Approximately 70% of the patients have systemic disease, of which vasculitis is considered the pathological mechanism. Corticosteroids are the first line of treatment; multiple immunosuppressive drugs were also used with varying degrees of success. The novelty in the treatment of the disease is tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha-blockers, but more studies are necessary to establish their efficacy.
Publicações recentes
Cervical vestibular evoked myogenic potentials and video head impulse test in Ménière disease.
Gadolinium-enhanced MRI reveals dynamic development of endolymphatic hydrops in Ménière's disease.
Evaluation of vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (VEMP) and electrocochleography for the diagnosis of Ménière's disease.
🥈 CoorteRefractory episodic vertigo: role of intratympanic gentamicin and vestibular evoked myogenic potentials.
Hearing function after betahistine therapy in patients with Ménière's disease.
📚 EuropePMCmostrando 3
French protocol for diagnosis and management of Cogan's syndrome.
La Revue de medecine interneAn overload of missense variants in the OTOG gene may drive a higher prevalence of familial Meniere disease in the European population.
Human geneticsWhole-exome sequencing suggests multiallelic inheritance for childhood-onset Ménière's disease.
Annals of human geneticsAssociações
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Referências e fontes
Bases de dados externas citadas neste artigo
Publicações científicas
Artigos indexados no PubMed ligados a esta doença no grafo RarasNet — título, periódico e PMID direto da fonte, sem intermediação de IA.
- French protocol for diagnosis and management of Cogan's syndrome.
- An overload of missense variants in the OTOG gene may drive a higher prevalence of familial Meniere disease in the European population.
- Whole-exome sequencing suggests multiallelic inheritance for childhood-onset Ménière's disease.
- COGAN'S SYNDROME.
- Cervical vestibular evoked myogenic potentials and video head impulse test in Ménière disease.
- Gadolinium-enhanced MRI reveals dynamic development of endolymphatic hydrops in Ménière's disease.
- Evaluation of vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (VEMP) and electrocochleography for the diagnosis of Ménière's disease.
- Refractory episodic vertigo: role of intratympanic gentamicin and vestibular evoked myogenic potentials.
- Hearing function after betahistine therapy in patients with Ménière's disease.
Bases de dados e fontes oficiais
Identificadores e referências canônicas usadas para montar este verbete.
- ORPHA:45360(Orphanet)
- OMIM OMIM:156000(OMIM)
- MONDO:0007972(MONDO)
- Busca completa no PubMed(PubMed)
- Artigo Wikipedia(Wikipedia)
- Q460167(Wikidata)
Dados compilados pelo RarasNet a partir de fontes abertas (Orphanet, OMIM, MONDO, PubMed/EuropePMC, ClinicalTrials.gov, DATASUS, PCDT/MS). Este conteúdo é informativo e não substitui avaliação médica.
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