Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Ear
- Normal
- Structure
- Vestibular system
- Physiology
- Hearing
- Conduction of Sound
- External Ear
- Localization and amplification of sounds
- Transmission to tympanic membrane
- Middle Ear
- Vibration of tympanic membrane
- Impedance matching
- Inner Ear
- 3 Parts separated by membranes
- Organ of Corti
- Excitation of Hair Receptors
- Balance
- Auditory Pathway
- Abnormal
- Ear Infections
- Otitis Externa
- Acute localized otitis externa
- Infection of the hair follicle “
Furuncle” / Staphylococcus aureus /
Cartilaginous meatus
- S&S: Sever pain, discharge, hearing loss, and aural fullness. On
examination: Local tenderness, EAC edematous, tender
preauricular lymph node, furuncle in the posterior meatal,
and obliterations of the retroauricular groove
- Acute diffuse otitis externa
- Commonest, called swimmer’s ear / Pseudomonas
aeruginosa, staphylococcus aureus, proteus mirabilis
- S&S: Pain, itching, aural fullness, and hearing loss. On
examination: tenderness, EAC narrow and congested, with
edematous skin, and there will be clear or purulent exudates
- Malignant otitis externa
- Invasive infection / Pseudomonas aeruginosa / Extend into deeper
tissues (bone, soft tissue, and vascular system) / Immune
compromised people, malnourished, diabetes mellitus, leukemia
- S&S: Otalgia, otorrhea, pain that tend to be worse at night,
radiating pain to temporomandibular joint “pain with chewing”
- Fungal otitis externa
(Otomycosis)
- 10% presents with S&S of otitis externa / 90%
aspergillus species, the rest candida species
- S&S: Malodorous discharge, inflammation,
pruritus, scaling, and severe discomfort
- Otitis Media
- Acute
- Children after sore throat, cold, or upper
respiratory / Bacteria: Streptococcus
pneumoniae (40%), haemophilus influenzae
(25%), moraxella catarrhalis (15%) / Viruses
(20%): Respiratory syncytial virus, rhinoviruses,
influenza viruses, and adenoviruses
- S&S: Fever, irritability, vomiting, anorexia,
cough, pulling or rubbing of the “below 2
years”, otalgia, otorrhea, pain and hearing
loss, upper respiratory symptoms
- Chronic
- Otitis media with effusion
- S&S: Hearing loss, conductive hearing loss,
tinnitus, and bulging or retraction of
tympanic membrane. Self-limiting 80%, if it
persists (tympanostomy tube insertion)
- Self-limiting 80%, if it
persists (tympanostomy
tube insertion)
- Chronic suppurative otitis media
- S&S: Hearing loss, delayed intellectual
development, limited employability, and
disturbed social life, fatal if untreated
- Complications
- Extracranial
- Hearing loss
- Types
- Conductive Hearing Loss
- Sensorineural Hearing Loss
- Mixed Hearing Loss
- Facial nerve paralysis
- Labyrinthitis
- Mastoiditis with subperiosteal abscess
- Mastoidectomy
- Types
- Simple mastoidectomy: removing the infected
air cells, and draining middle ear
- Radical mastoidectomy: removing mastoid air cells, eardrum, most of middle ear structures, and
ear canal. This procedure is reserved for complicated mastoid disease
- Modified radical mastoidectomy: less severe form of radical mastoidectomy involves removing
mastoid air cells along with some, but not all, middle ear structures
- Petrositis
- Cholesteatoma
- Types
- Primary acquired
- It happens because of tympanic membrane retraction which forms a cyst or pouch
- Secondary Acquired
- Happens secondary to the pathologic changes that happens to
the tympanic membrane: recurrent infections, perforation of
tympanic membrane or trauma to tympanic membrane
- Congenital
- Caused by the remnants of epithelium that accumulate
during the embryological development and get trapped
in the middle ear behind the tympanic membrane
- Aural polyps
- An otic, or aural, polyp is a benign proliferation of
chronic inflammatory cells and granulation tissue that
is usually lined with benign reactive epithelium
- Solitary, Polypoid, Reddish mass
- Management
- First-line
- Amoxicillin
- Amoxicillin-clavulanate
- In case the bacteria
produce beta-lactamase
- Second-line or nonsevere penicillin allergy
- Cefdinir /
cefuroxime /
cefpodoxime
- Ceftriaxone (i.m)
- Vertigo
- Peripheral vestibular causes
- Acute labrynthitis / Vestibular neuritis / BPPV /
Cholestotoma / Menier’s disease / Ostosclerosis /
Perilymphatic fistula, SCDS / Impacted wax
- Central vestibular causes
- Cerebellopontine angle tumor / Cerebrovascular
disease / Migraine / Multiple sclerosis
- False sense of motion, usually rotational
- Tinnitus
- Objective
- Vascular (pulsatile)
- A/V malformations / Vascular tumors / Venous hum
(cardiac murmurs, anemia, BIH, thyrotoxicosis, pregnancy,
dehiscent jugular bulb) / Atherosclerosis / Ectopic carotid
artery / Persistent stapedial artery / Vascular loops
- Neuromuscular
- Palatomyclonus / Stapedial muscle spasm
- Patulous eustachian tube
- Significant weight loss, radiation to the nasopharynx
- Subjective
- Otologic
- Hearing loss (presbycusis, noise exposure,
otosclerosis, middle ear effusion) /
Meniere’s disease / Acoustic neuroma
- Ototoxic drugs or substances
- Neurologic
- MS / Head trauma
- Metabolic
- Thyroid disorders / Hyperlipidemia / B12 deficiency
- Psychological
- Depression / anxiety
- Infectious
- Syphilis / Meningitis
- The perception of sound in the absence of external stimuli
- Otorrhea
- Purulent discharge indicates the presence of
infection: Onset of an acute infections (white),
persistent (yellow or brown)
- Mucoid discharge indicates a perforation
of the tympanic membrane
- Bloody discharge may follow trauma or occur with
granulation tissue associated with chronic infection
- Clear, watery fluid, especially when associated with a history
of trauma or skull base surgery, is likely to be CSF
- Foul-smelling discharge is usually associated with cholesteatoma or a neoplasm
- Otalgia
- Primary
- Secondry