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Background: A high percentage of the patients at ENT or plastic
surgery clinics have ENT abnormalities, either congenital or those developing
later in life. Some are life threatening, while others cause disability and
esthetic problems, with profound consequences for the affected child and the
family. In addition, ENT abnormalities usually place stress on interpersonal
relationships, causing social isolation, unhappiness and depression. The
majority of these abnormalities is genetic and follows autosomal recessive pattern
of inheritance. Geneticists believe that there is a higher frequency of autosomal
recessive disorders among the offspring of consanguineous parents. The aim of
this study was to find the frequency of ENT abnormalities among children born of consanguineous parents.
Methods: We studied 3503 files (pedigrees) of patients referred for genetic
counseling at the Department of Genetics at Imam
Khomeini Hospital,
Tehran, Iran, from 1999 to 2000. We studied these
cases according to degree of parental consanguinity, patterns of inheritance
and gender using SPSS v.15.
Results: Of all 3503 files, 206 had ENT abnormalities, of which 157 had consangui-neous
marriages. Among these 157 pedigrees, 496 cases had consanguineous parents. Out of the 496 cases, the
four most frequent ENT abnormalities were: 115 cases (23.2%) of deafness,
53
cases (10.7%) of hearing loss, 12 cases (2.4%) of cleft lip and palate, and 5 cases (1%) of cleft
palate.
Conclusion: This high frequency of ENT abnormalities
indicates that consanguineous marriage should be discouraged by Iranian policy
makers in order to reduce the burden of these disorders on society. Further
research into the cultural problems that encourage consanguineous marriage and
ways of resolving these problems is recommended.
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