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PRESENTATIONS OF MIDDLE EAR DISEASE Elizabeth Rose Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital Royal Children’s Hospital

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PRESENTATIONS OF MIDDLE EAR DISEASE

Elizabeth Rose

Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital

Royal Children’s Hospital

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OTITIS MEDIAA SPECTRUM OF DISEASE

• acute otitis media• chronic otitis media with effusion• atelectasis of the tympanic membrane• chronic adhesive otitis media• chronic suppurative otitis media

– tubotympanic (“safe”)– atticoantral (“unsafe”)

and may be a continuum of disease

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ACUTE OTITIS MEDIA

• the presence of a middle-ear effusion

• signs and symptoms of infection– fever, irritability, pain,

otorrhoea

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Management of AOM

• Pain relief

• Decongestants (oral/topical) and antihistamines do not make the eustachian tube function better

• Decongestants do relieve the symptoms of a blocked nose

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Antibiotic therapy

• Standard spectrum (sensitive to β-lactamase)– penicillin, erythromycin, ampicillins

• Extended spectrum– amoxicillin/clavulanate,

trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole

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Antibiotic therapy

• Recommended treatment is:

amoxicillin 50mg/kg/day in 3 doses– Can give up to 100mg/kg/day– Continue for 5 days

• If no improvement in 2 days change to amoxicillin/clavulanate

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Penicillin allergy

• trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole

• clindamycin

• ceftriaxone IM, but will often need continuing oral medication

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Antibiotic therapy• if severe symptoms

- pain - perforation

(use topical as well, e.g. Ciprofloxacin HC iii drops tds for 3 days)

• ≤ 2 years of age• immune deficiency• follow-up not possible

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CHRONIC OTITIS MEDIA WITH EFFUSION

• the presence of a middle ear effusion

• asymptomatic apart from some hearing loss

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CHRONIC SUPPURATIVE OTITIS MEDIA

“deafness and discharge”

• persistent disease

• insidious onset

• severe destruction

• irreversible sequelae

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1. tubotympanic disease (“safe”)

central perforation

2. atticoantral disease (“unsafe”)

cholesteatomathe presence of keratinising squamous

epithelium in the middle ear

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PRESENTATIONS OF MIDDLE EAR

DISEASE

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PAIN(Otalgia)

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DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF EAR PAIN

A. External auditory canal

• trauma ( e.g. from cotton bud abuse)

• auricular haematoma

• foreign body

• otitis externa

• external auditory canal tumour

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DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF EAR PAIN

B. Middle ear

• acute otitis media

• bullous myringitis

• chronic suppurative otitis media

• middle ear tumour

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DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF EAR PAIN

C. Referred pain– oropharynx (IXth nerve)

• tonsillitis/post-tonsillectomy• carcinoma, including posterior tongue

– laryngopharynx (Xth nerve)• pyriform fossa

– upper molar teeth, TMJ, parotid gland (Vc)• impacted wisdom teeth• changes to bite from new dentures

– cervical spine (C2, C3)• pain is often worse at night

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DISCHARGE(Otorrhoea)

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HEARING LOSS

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FACIAL PARALYSIS

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HEADACHE

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VERTIGO

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TINNITUS

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Chris – age 53 years

• can hear a “washing machine" in the right ear

• getting worse for 4 months

• no pain

• no hearing loss

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NO SYMPTOMS

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YOU ARE INVITED!

1. ENT clinic at RVEEH

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All clinical years students

Every week day afternoon

(and some mornings)

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ContactRehana De Jong

9929 8562

[email protected]

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YOU ARE INVITED!

2. Hedley Summons Otolaryngology Prize

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All clinical years students from University of

Melbourne

Coming in September!

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Take-home message 1remember referred otalgia

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Take-home message 2more is missed in medicine by not

looking than by not knowing