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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bilateral deafness and inner ear damage in Maltese and Great Pyrenean

By Coppens, A G et al.·Published in Journal of comparative pathology·2000·Laboratoire d'Anatomie Fonctionnelle·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Bilateral deafness in a maltese terrier and a great pyrenean puppy: inner ear morphology.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 4-month-old female Maltese terrier and a 6-week-old male Great Pyrenean puppy were brought in for testing because they were both found to be deaf. Electrophysiological tests confirmed that neither puppy could hear sounds, and further examination of their inner ears showed significant damage. The Maltese terrier had severe inner ear abnormalities, while the Great Pyrenean had less typical issues. These conditions are likely congenital, meaning they were present at birth. Unfortunately, there are no treatments to restore hearing in these cases.

People also search for: puppy deafness symptoms · Maltese terrier hearing problems · Great Pyrenean puppy deafness treatment

Abstract

Two puppies, a 4-month-old female Maltese terrier and a 6-week-old male Great Pyrenean, were presented for confirmation of bilateral deafness by electrophysiological testing. In both puppies, brainstem auditory potentials were not evoked by 90 dB NHL click stimulation of each ear. Examination of the inner ear revealed a bilateral cochleo-saccular degeneration in both animals. The lesions were characterized by generalized atrophy of the stria vascularis, collapse of the cochlear duct, degeneration of the organ of Corti, an abnormal tectorial membrane, and saccular collapse, with a normal spiral ganglion. The cochlear duct was entirely obliterated throughout the cochleae in the Maltese terrier puppy, but was locally and asymmetrically affected in the Great Pyrenean. The abnormalities observed in the Maltese terrier puppy were identical with those previously described in deaf Dalmatian puppies; the lesions observed in the Great Pyrenean, however, were less typical. This is the first histopathological description of cochleo-saccular degeneration in the Maltese terrier and Great Pyrenean breeds. In both puppies the defect was probably congenital.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10684693/