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Chronic Otitis Media
What is otitis media?
Otitis media
refers to inflammation of the middle ear. When infection occurs, the condition
is called "acute otitis media." Acute otitis media occurs when
a cold, allergy, or upper respiratory infection, and the presence of bacteria or
viruses lead to the accumulation of pus and mucus behind the eardrum, blocking
the Eustachian tube. This causes earache and swelling.
When fluid forms
in the middle ear, the condition is known as "otitis media with
effusion." This occurs in a recovering ear infection or when one is
about to occur. Fluid can remain in the ear for weeks to many months. When a
discharge from the ear persists or repeatedly returns, this is sometimes called
chronic middle ear infection. Fluid can remain in the ear up to three weeks
following the infection. If not treated, chronic ear infections have potentially
serious consequences such as temporary or permanent hearing
loss.
How does otitis media affect a child’s
hearing?
| If you believe your child has a hearing loss, the young
patient should be examined by an ear, nose, and throat specialist at the
earliest opportunity. | All children with middle
ear infection or fluid have some degree of hearing loss. The average hearing
loss in ears with fluid is 24 decibels...equivalent to wearing ear plugs.
(Twenty-four decibels is about the level of the very softest of whispers.)
Thicker fluid can cause much more loss, up to 45 decibels (the range of
conversational speech).
Your child may have hearin g loss if he or she is unable to understand
certain words and speaks louder than normal. Essentially, a child experiencing
hearing loss from middle ear infections will hear muffled sounds and
misunderstand speech rather than incur a complete hearing loss. Even so, the
consequences can be significant – the young patient could permanently lose the
ability to consistently understand speech in a noisy environment (such as a
classroom) leading to a delay in learning important speech and language
skills.
Types of hearing loss
Conductive hearing
loss is a form of hearing impairment due to a lesion in the external auditory
canal or middle ear. This form of hearing loss is usually temporary and found in
those ages 40 or younger. Untreated chronic ear infections can lead to
conductive hearing loss; draining the infected middle ear drum will usually
return hearing to normal.
The other form of hearing loss is
sensorineural hearing loss, hearing loss due to a lesion of the auditory
division of the 8th cranial nerve or the inner ear. Historically, this condition
is most prevalent in middle age and older patients; however, extended exposure
to loud music can lead to sensorineural hearing loss in adolescents.
When should a hearing test be performed?
A
hearing test should be performed for children who have frequent ear infections,
hearing loss that lasts more than six weeks, or fluid in the middle ear for more
than three months. There are a wide range of medical devices now available to
test a child’s hearing, Eustachian tube function, and reliability of the ear
drum. They include the otoscopy, tympanometer, and audiometer.
Do children lose their hearing for reasons other than
chronic otitis media?
Children can incur temporary hearing loss
for other reasons than chronic middle ear infection and Eustachian tube
dysfunction. They include:
- Cerumen impaction (compressed earwax)
- Otitis externa: Inflammation of the external
auditory canal, also called “swimmer's ear.”
- Cholesteatoma: A mass of horn shaped squamous cell
epithelium and cholesterol in the middle ear, usually resulting from
chronic otitis media.
- Otosclerosis: This is a disease of the otic capsule
(bony labyrinth) in the ear, which is more prevalent in adults and
characterized by formation of soft, vascular bone leading to progressive
conductive hearing loss. It occurs due to fixation of the stapes (bones
in the ear). Sensorineural hearing loss may result because of
involvement of the cochlear duct.
- Trauma: A trauma to the ear or head may cause
temporary or permanent hearing
loss.
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© 2004 AAO-HNS/AAO-HNSF
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