Acute cortical deafness in a child with MELAS syndrome

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Abstract

Auditory impairment in mitochondrial disorders are usually due to peripheral sensorineural dysfunction. Central deafness is only rarely reported. We report here an 11-year-old boy with MELAS syndrome who presented with subacute deafness after waking up from sleep. Peripheral hearing loss was rapidly excluded. A brain MRI documented bilateral stroke-like lesions predominantly affecting the superior temporal lobe, including the primary auditory cortex, confirming the central nature of deafness. Slow recovery was observed in the following weeks. This case serves to illustrate the numerous challenges caused by MELAS and the unusual occurrence of acute cortical deafness, that to our knowledge has not be described so far in a child in this setting.

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Pittet, M. P., Idan, R. B., Kern, I., Guinand, N., Van, H. C., Toso, S., & Fluss, J. (2016). Acute cortical deafness in a child with MELAS syndrome. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease, 39(3), 465–466. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10545-016-9929-x

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