Author/Authors :
Ajallouyan، Mohammad نويسنده New Hearing Technologies Research Center, Baqiyatallah
University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IR Iran , , Radfar، Shokofeh نويسنده Child Psychiatrist, Behavioral Sciences Center, Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran Radfar, Shokofeh , Nouhi، Sima نويسنده , , Tavallaie، Seid Abbas نويسنده New Hearing Technologies Research Center, Baqiyatallah
University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IR Iran , , AMIRSALARI، Susan نويسنده Assistant Professor of Pediatric Neurology , , YOUSEFI، Jaleh نويسنده New Hearing Technologies Research Center, Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , , Hasanali Fard، Mahdieh نويسنده New Hearing Technologies Research Center, Baqiyatallah
University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IR Iran ,
Abstract :
It seems that there is a relationship between consanguinity and
profound hearing loss but there is little data about the association of
consanguinity and hearing loss in Iran. The aim of this study is to
demonstrate the causes of profound bilateral sensorineural hearing loss
among Iranian samples who are candidates for cochlear implantation. This
study was retrospective, analytical, and designed to collect information
about profound hearing impaired cases referred to the Baqiyatallah
Cochlear implantation center using enumeration. A total of 310 children
with profound hearing impairments participated in this study. They were
aged from 6 months to 4 years old. The study was done between January
2007 and April 2009. Chi-square tests were used to show whether there
was any statistical difference between the incidence of marital
consanguinity of their parents and the normal population. Sixty-five
percent of those 310 children had parents who had married with their
relatives. Of the 203 (65%) parents that had consanguineous marriages,
132 were first cousins, which includes the children of two brothers (37
[11.8%] patrilateral parallel cousins), the children of two sisters (38
[12.2%] multi-lateral parallel cousins), or the children of a brother
and a sister (57 [18.3%] cross cousins). Fifty-four (17.4%) of the
parents were second cousins and 17 (5.2%) were beyond second cousins.
Also, hearing loss etiology was obvious in 237 (76.3%) of the patients
with profound hearing loss but was unknown in 73 (23.7%). Hereditary was
identified as the most common cause in 33% of the cases. Our data
demonstrated a 65% occurrence of consanguineous marriage among the
parents of deaf children, which is statistically different from the
percentage of consanguineous marriage among Iranian population (38%).
This indicates an obvious relationship between severe hearing loss and
consanguineous marriage.