{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Hearing instability and abnormal auditory pathways in infants with congenital cytomegalovirus infection: An audiological and radiological single-centre prospective cohort analysis. {Author}: Airlangga TJ;Bashiruddin J;Mangunatmadja I;Pandelaki J;Bardosono S;Ibrahim F;Zizlavsky S;Anggraini R; {Journal}: Med J Malaysia {Volume}: 79 {Issue}: 4 {Year}: 2024 Jul 暂无{Abstract}: BACKGROUND: This prospective cohort study aims to investigate the hearing dynamics and the changes in the central auditory pathways in infants with congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) infection.
METHODS: cCMV-infected neonates aged ≤3 weeks old were recruited and underwent clinical and laboratory tests to detect viremia and symptomatic infection, hearing examinations at three and six months of age, and radiological imaging of brain auditory pathways using diffusion tensor imaging.
RESULTS: From 26 eligible infants (52 ears), we detected symptomatic infection in nine (34.6%), viremia in 14 (14/25; 56.0%) and sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) in 14 infants (53.8%). We observed 40 ears (76.9%) with unstable hearing thresholds, 17 (42.5%) of which fluctuated. Hearing fluctuation and progressivity were more common in symptomatic infection (66.7% vs. 14.7%, p<0.001; and 38.9% vs. 2.9%, p=0.002; respectively). A substantial proportion of ears had reduced fractional anisotropy (FA) in the medial geniculate body (59.1%), superior olivary nucleus (45.5%), trapezoid body (40.9%), auditory radiation (36.4%) and inferior colliculus (31.8%). Symptomatic infection was associated with an increased FA in the medial geniculate body (mean difference, MD: 0.12; 95% Confidence Intervals, 95%CI: 0.03, 0.22) and viremia in the inferior colliculus (MD: 0.09; 95%CI: 0.02, 0.16). An FA in the inferior colliculus of ≥0.404 had a sensitivity and specificity of 68.8% and 83.3% in predicting viremia (area under the curve 0.823; 95%CI: 0.633, 1.000, p=0.022).
CONCLUSIONS: SNHL along with its fluctuation and progression are common in cCMV-infected infants. cCMV infection may induce structural changes in the central auditory pathway.