Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Ahmed, a 13-year-old
presented to the clinic with
- Earache
- Causes
- Otitis Media
- Infection of Middle Ear
- Signs and Symptoms
- Earache, ear pulling,
purulent discharge,
diminished hearing,
tinnitis
- Causative
Microorganisms
- Bacteria
- S. pneumoniae H.
influenzae Moraxella
catarrhalis
- Viruses
- RSV Rhinoviruses
Influenza viruses
Adenovirus
- No tenderness Normal EAC, Edematous
and bulging tympanic membraen
- Otitis Externa
- Infection of External Ear
- Causative Microrganisms
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa S. aureus
Proteus mirabilis
- Tenderness EAC swollen Normal Tympanic membrane
- Eustachian tube
dysfunction
- Referred Pain
- TMJ Syndrome
- Ear Pain
- Jaw Pain
- Neck Pain
- Headache
- Dental
Infection
- Pharyngitis
Tonsillitis
- Sinusitis/Rhinitis
- Trigeminal
Neuralgia
- Esophagitis
- Foreign body in the ear
- Trauma
- Laceration
- Abrasion
- Barotrauma
- Deep
Sea
Diving
- Mastoiditis
- Mumps
- Psoriasis
- Definition
- Pain in the ear
- Anatomy of the ear
Anlagen:
- Inner Ear
- Sensory Organ:
Cochlea
- Scala vestibuli
- Contains
Perilymph
- Helicotrema
- Point of
Communication
- Scala media
- Contains Endolymph
- Scala
tymoani
- Middle Ear
- Auditory ossicles
- Malleus
- Incus
- Stapes
- External Ear
- Collects sound
waves and
channels them
down the auditory
channel
- Seperated by:
Tympanic
Membrane
- Pearly grey,
translucent, with a
sharp light reflex and
bony landmarks
- Ear Discharge
- Types
- Wax
- Pus
- Mucus and/or Muco-pus
- Blood
- Fresh blood
- Tinged
- CSF
- Causes
- Cancer of
Ear Canal
- Chronic
Purulent
Otitis
Media
- Trauma
- Otitis externa
Swimmers Ear
- Vertigo
- Spinning sensation while body is
stationary with respect to surroundings
- In a healthy person, stability is
mainted by the
vestibular apparatus
- Otolith organs
- Saccule
- Macula is vertical
- Up and Down
- Utricle
- Macula is horizontal
- Right and left
- Macula
- sensory organ
- Covered in a
gelatinous layer
- Hair
- statoconia
- CaCO3 Stones
- Semicircular canals
- Tinnitis
- Types
- Subjective
- Only patient can hear it,
most common type
- Objective
- When both patient and
doctor can hear it, more rare
- Ringing, buzzing, roaring
or clicking
- Sounds one normally does not hear
- Physiology of normal hearing
- ss
- Causes
- Age-related hearing loss
- Exposure to loud noise
- Earwax blockage
- Changes in ear bones
- Acoustic neuroma
- Blood related causes
- Atherosclerosis
- High blood pressure
- Arteriovenous
malformation
- Medications
- Chloroquine
Aspirin
Diuretics
- Aural Polyp
- Pedunculated
granulation tissue
Mass
- Causes
- Infection
- Cholestatoma
- Cystic loculation of squamous epiithelium
in the middle ear or mastoid process which
enlarged by erosion of underlying bone
- Types
- Congenital
- This type of cholesteatoma is very rare, and occurs
when squamous epithelium residue remains in the
middle ear during development of the embryo.
- Acquired
- Primary
- Retraction Pocket
- Basal Cell Hyperplasia
- Squamous Metaplasia
- Secondary
- Epithelial migration
- Teriairy
- Post-traumatic
- Post-tympanoplasty