INTRODUCTION Auditory neuropathy refers to impaired synchronization of the auditory signal along the cochlear nerve. The present study, following CARE case report guidelines, describes a case of auditory neuropathy secondary… Click to show full abstract
INTRODUCTION Auditory neuropathy refers to impaired synchronization of the auditory signal along the cochlear nerve. The present study, following CARE case report guidelines, describes a case of auditory neuropathy secondary to a genetic variant not previously described. OBSERVATION An 18-year-old patient was followed for multiple learning disorder. His main complaint was speech comprehension, especially in noise. Auditory neuropathy was diagnosed on electrophysiological criteria, linked to a 2.66Mb deletion on the short arm of chromosome 16, at 16p13.11p12.3 (15,492,317-18,162,167, according to the hg19 version of the human reference genome). Adapted speech therapy sessions with auditory training for intelligibility in noise and a hearing aid with high-frequency microphone were prescribed. At 6months, the patient reported improvement in understanding speech in noise. CONCLUSION The involvement of this 16p13.11 deletion in the patient's symptomatology was not obvious, in a probable context of incomplete penetrance and variable expression. Early diagnosis of auditory neuropathy allowed implementation of better adapted multidisciplinary specialized management.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.