2018
DOI: 10.1007/s00198-018-4663-x
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Osteogenesis imperfecta and the teeth, eyes, and ears—a study of non-skeletal phenotypes in adults

Abstract: Although significant health problems outside the skeleton are frequent in adult patients with OI, the patients are not consistently monitored and treated for their symptoms. Clinicians treating adult patients with OI should be aware of non-skeletal health issues and consider including regular interdisciplinary check-ups in the management plan for adult OI patients.

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Cited by 31 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Conductive hearing loss was mostly presented in younger individuals, whereas mixed and sensorineural hearing loss were present across all ages (Kuurila et al, ; Swinnen et al, 2012). The more severe degrees of hearing loss were more prevalent in milder forms of OI (Hald et al, ); however, this finding contradicted Kuurila et al () who found no correlation between hearing loss degree and OI type. Similarly, Martens et al () and Swinnen et al (2012) found no correlation between OI type and occurrence of hearing loss (Martens et al ; Swinnen et al, 2012).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…Conductive hearing loss was mostly presented in younger individuals, whereas mixed and sensorineural hearing loss were present across all ages (Kuurila et al, ; Swinnen et al, 2012). The more severe degrees of hearing loss were more prevalent in milder forms of OI (Hald et al, ); however, this finding contradicted Kuurila et al () who found no correlation between hearing loss degree and OI type. Similarly, Martens et al () and Swinnen et al (2012) found no correlation between OI type and occurrence of hearing loss (Martens et al ; Swinnen et al, 2012).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The OI type of six individuals was unknown (Kuurila et al, ; Kuurila et al, ; McAllion & Paterson, ; Wekre et al, ). Most of the studies did not report on OI genetic etiology of their participants, except for two (Hald et al, ; Martens et al, ). Two studies did not describe the clinical phenotype of their study sample ( n = 982; Folkestad et al, 2016; Ruiter‐Ligeti et al, ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A frequent dental abnormality in OI is dentinogenesis imperfecta, which is caused by dysplastic dentin and can lead to dental discoloration, tooth fracture, and attrition . Genotype–phenotype correlation studies show that the large majority of patients with OI types III and IV caused by qualitative mutations have dentinogenesis imperfecta, whereas only a small minority of individuals with COL1A1 haploinsufficiency mutations have dentinogenesis imperfecta that is visible on clinical inspection . Beyond dentinogenesis imperfecta, tooth agenesis is a common finding in OI .…”
Section: Other Disease Manifestationsmentioning
confidence: 99%