Di Nardo W, Cattani P, Lopizzo T, Cantore I, Marchese M R, Marchetti S, Scorpecci A, Giannantonio S, Parrilla C, Cianfrone F, Fadda G, Paludetti G
Institute of Otorhinolaryngology, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, IT-00168 Rome, Italy.
Audiol Neurootol. 2009;14(5):290-5. doi: 10.1159/000212107. Epub 2009 Apr 15.
The cause of about 30% of bilateral sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is still unknown. A viral etiology is among the most frequently proposed ones and the supposed diagnosis is only based upon few clinical and laboratory data. The detection of viral presence within a damaged compartment may represent a way to supply interesting data for confirmation of viral etiology and to explain pathogenic mechanisms.
The aim of our study was to identify the possible presence of pathogenic viruses in the inner ear extracellular compartment in patients with bilateral severe sensorineural deafness of unknown etiology who underwent cochlear implant surgery.
4 patients, aged from 2 to 7 years and affected by SNHL underwent cochlear implantation surgery and, at the same time, endolabyrinthine fluid sampling. The samples were subsequently sent for viral nucleic acid extraction and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) treatment: multiplex PCR and realtime-PCR were used. In each endolabyrinthine fluid sample, cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), varicella-zoster virus (VZV), herpes simplex virus type 1 and 2 (HSV-1, HSV-2) and enterovirus genomes were searched for.
One patient was positive for intracochlear CMV, as confirmed by another base-pair segment PCR. EBV, VZV, HSV and enterovirus were detected in none of the 4 patients.
Our finding of CMV genome within the cochlea of a deaf patient without any evidence of acute and prenatal CMV infection suggests its possible role in postnatal inner ear injury through reactivation of latent virus within the cochlea. This hypothesis could also be considered valid for some patients with anti-CMV-IgG-positive serology and absence of endolabyrinthine viral genome since viruses can be in an inactive state at the time of fluid collection. PCR has proved to be a very useful tool in order to investigate infectious causes of deafness even for more than one virus type at a time and in a limited quantity of sample, such as the small volume of endolabyrinthine liquid collected from children during cochlear implant surgery.
约30%的双侧感音神经性听力损失(SNHL)病因仍不明。病毒病因是最常被提出的病因之一,且假定诊断仅基于少数临床和实验室数据。在受损区域内检测病毒的存在可能是一种提供有趣数据以证实病毒病因并解释致病机制的方法。
我们研究的目的是确定在接受人工耳蜗植入手术的病因不明的双侧严重感音神经性耳聋患者的内耳细胞外区域中是否可能存在致病病毒。
4例年龄在2至7岁、患有SNHL的患者接受了人工耳蜗植入手术,同时进行了内淋巴液采样。随后将样本送去进行病毒核酸提取和聚合酶链反应(PCR)处理:使用多重PCR和实时PCR。在每个内淋巴液样本中,搜索巨细胞病毒(CMV)、爱泼斯坦-巴尔病毒(EBV)、水痘-带状疱疹病毒(VZV)、单纯疱疹病毒1型和2型(HSV-1、HSV-2)以及肠道病毒基因组。
通过另一次碱基对片段PCR证实,1例患者耳蜗内CMV呈阳性。4例患者中均未检测到EBV、VZV、HSV和肠道病毒。
我们在一名无任何急性和产前CMV感染证据的耳聋患者的耳蜗内发现CMV基因组,提示其可能通过耳蜗内潜伏病毒的重新激活在产后内耳损伤中发挥作用。对于一些抗CMV-IgG血清学阳性且内淋巴液病毒基因组阴性的患者,这一假设也可能成立,因为病毒在采集液体时可能处于非活性状态。事实证明,PCR是一种非常有用的工具,可用于调查耳聋的感染性病因,即使是同时针对多种病毒类型且样本量有限的情况,例如在人工耳蜗植入手术期间从儿童收集的少量内淋巴液。