Label the tympanic membrane

How do you perform an ear examination?
https: //geekymedics.com/hearing-ear-examination-osce-guide/
- General inspection
- Basic hearing assessment with rubbing tragus
- Weber’s and Rinne’s with 512 Hz
- Palpate the pinna, mastoid process, preauricular area
- Otoscopy with normal ear first and ask about any pain

How is pure tone audiometry performed?
- Pure tone threshold is the lowest decibel that the patient hears the pure tone 50% of the time

How do you read an audiogram?

Red line = right ear
Blue line = left

Why may someone with high frequency hearing loss struggle to comprehend speech?

How may impacted ear wax present and how is it treated?
`- Remove if symptomatic, need to view tympanic membrane or someone needs a mould for a hearing aid
Mx:

How may otitis externa present? (caused by P.Aeruginosa/S.Aureus)
- Acute <3weeks, Chronic >3months
- Diffuse when widespread inflammation of the skin and subdermis
- Localised when infected hair follicle that can become a boil in the ear canal
- Malignant when spreads to surrounding bones e.g mastoid, temporal bones
Symptoms: pain, itch, discharge, hearing loss, red oedematous ear canal, will be painful when touching pinna

How is otitis externa treated?
- Warm compress
- Topical acetic acid 2% spray for 7-14 days or topical corticosteroid e.g dexamethasone spray (OTOMIZE)

How does acute otitis media present? (Hib, S.Pneumoniae, M.Cattarhalis) and what are some complication?
- Risks: second hand smoke, nursery, facial deformities e.g cleft pallate
Complications: recurrence, hearing loss, TM perforation, mastoiditis, meningitis, intracranial abscess, sinus thrombosis, and facial nerve paralysi

How should acute otitis media be managed?
- Check for intracranial complications that need emergency admission e.g mastoid tenderness
- Advise analgesia and explain self limiting 3-7 days

What are the different ways that you can describe an ear drum perforation?
- Dry or Wet - A dry perforation was defined as a perforation without the presence of secondary bloody and watery substances and purulent otorrhea on the ruptured membrane and at perforation edges, whereas a wet perforation was defined as a perforation with the presence of those substances.
- Attic/Peripheral: if in pars flaccida. less safe as not under tension
May present with sudden hearing loss, tinnutus, fluid leaking from ear, itchy

How do we manage a tympanic membrane perforation?
- Keep ear very dry and do not put anything in there whilst healing
- Analgesia and warm compress
- Don’t blow nose too hard

How does choleasteatoma present and how do we manage it in primary care?
Sac of keratinising squamous epithelium in the pars flaccida that can errode into the middle ear structures
Often asymptomatic to start then foul smelling blood stained discharge. May have retraction pocket with crust/granulation tissue/pearly white/keratin material in upper part of TM
Semi-urgent referral to ENT for audiology assessment and CT. Topical antibiotics before surgical removal

What is this presentation of the eardrum and what is it caused by?
Calcification/scarring of the ear drum due to previous ear infections
Nothing to manage, no symptoms
How does otitis media with effusion (glue ear) present and what are some risk factors for this condition?
- Abnormal colour TM (e.g yellow), loss of light reflex, air bubbles, retracted concave TM
Risk Factors: large adenoids, cleft pallate, household smoking, allergic rhinitis, ET dysfunction, Down’s

How is otitis media with effusion managed?
- Observe over 6-12 weeks as may spontaneously resolve with at least two pure tone audiometry tests in this time as well as tympanometry
- Refer to ENT if hearing loss in these tests or symptoms persist after observation period

What is the purpose of the eustachian tube and how can it be blocked?
From the middle ear into post nasal space allowing mucus to clear and equillibriation of pressure when open
Cone of light on TM due to concave TM due to the pressure changes
Blocks: sinusitis, large adenoids, persistent rhinitis, smoking related changes to nasal mucosa

How may otosclerosis present and how is it managed in primary care?
Symptoms: usually bilateral conductive hearing loss, speaking softly, hearing better in noisy surroundings, hearing sounds from within your body, dizziness and balance problems
Refer for hearing tests and for CT. ENT may give hearing aids or stapedectomy

How does noise related hearing loss present and what does an audiogram of this show?
- Permanent!!!! Cannot be reversed, need to prevent by moving away from loud sounds, wearing earmuffs, using noise cancelling earphones
How does Meniere’s disease present and what are some risk factors for this disease?
- Risks: endolymphatic hydrops, autoimmunity, genetic susceptibility, metabolic disturbances, migraines, viral infection, head trauma

How can we manage Meniere’s disease in primary care before official diagnose by ENT?
Advice: reassure will clear up in 24 hours but to return if continues for 5-7 days, inform DVLA, don’t operate machinery when dizzy, tell patients to keep their meds always available
N+V: prescribe prochlorperazine or antihistamine/vestibular sedative (cinnarizine, cyclizine, or promethazine teoclate) for 7 days
Prevention: betahistine to reduce frequency and severity of attacks

How does presbyacusis present and how does it show up on audiogram?
Bilateral sensorineural hearing loss often slow onset and in noisy environments at first. Often noticed by other people
Can get tinnitus if gets progressive
Diagnosis of exclusion

How can presbyacusis be managed in primary care after pure tone audiometry?
- Reassure patient it is part of natural aging process
- Hearing aids
- Assistive hearing devices e.g light for doorbell

What is the definition of chronic supparative otitis media?
Chronic inflammation of the middle ear and mastoid cavity, which presents with recurrent ear discharges through a tympanic perforation
Do not swab the ear, refer for ENT assessment
Explain that the hearing loss will return when the perforation has healed
