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Clinical Otology

Clinical Otology. Balasubramanian Thiagarajan. Symtoms. Deafness Discharge Tinnitus Pain Vertigo. Deafness. Onset. Gradual. Sudden. Trigger. Sudden hearing loss (SN). Loss of atleast 30 dB in atleast three contiguous frequencies over a period of less than 3 days. Viral causes

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Clinical Otology

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  1. Clinical Otology Balasubramanian Thiagarajan

  2. Symtoms • Deafness • Discharge • Tinnitus • Pain • Vertigo

  3. Deafness Onset Gradual Sudden Trigger

  4. Sudden hearing loss (SN) • Loss of atleast 30 dB in atleast three contiguous frequencies over a period of less than 3 days. • Viral causes • Vascular causes • Hearing loss is the only symptom • High dose prednisolone may be useful

  5. Sensorineural hearing loss (Sudden) • Transverse fracture of pertrous bone • Auto immune reaction following trauma / infection • Inflammatory reaction (Viral infections) • Vascular compromise

  6. Conductive hearing loss - (Sudden) • Ossicular disruption • Haemotympanum (transient) • Failed attempts to remove cerumen

  7. Mixed hearing loss - (Sudden) • Fractures involving petrous bone • Auto immune reaction to proteins released due to traumatic injury

  8. Gradual progressive hearing loss • Inflammatory • Degenerative

  9. Fluctuating hearing loss • Impacted cerumen • Meniere's disease • Perilymph fistula

  10. Differentiating Conductive / SN loss • Difficulty in comprehending spoken words • Deafness associated with tinnitus • Intolerance to loud sounds • Tuning fork tests

  11. Discharge • Quantity • Quality • Duration of discharge • Aggravating / releiving factors

  12. Ear discharge - quality • Mucoid - CSOM • Mucopurulent - CSOM with mastoiditis • Serous - ASOM • Serosanguinous - ASOM, Otitis externa, trauma • Watery - CSF otorrhoea

  13. Ear discharge - causes • ASOM • CSOM • Otomycosis • CSF otorrhoea

  14. Tinnitus • Wax • Active otosclerosis • Sensorineural hearing loss • Ototoxic drugs • Objective tinnitus - Patulous ET, Palatal myoclonus

  15. Pain • Otalgia • Referred otalgia

  16. Ear pain 5,6,10th cranial nerves C2 & C3 Tragal tenderness + impated wax Referred otalgia Tragal tenderness - Tragal tenderness + Otalgia Otomcosis Myringitis granulosa Tragal tenderness + Tragal tenderness - AOM Keratosis obturans Tragal tenderness + Furuncle

  17. Vertigo • Sensation of unsteadiness / rotation • Diseases if inner ear cause vertigo • Associated with tinnitus and hard of hearing • Peripheral vertigo

  18. Nystagmus • Spontaneous / evoked • Direction of nystagmus - Right beating, left beating, geotrophic, ageotrophic. • Plane - Horizontal, rotatory or vertical • Intensity - (I, II and III degree)

  19. Spontaneous nystagmus • Eye movements without congnitive, visual, vestibular stimulus • Commonly induced by vestibular imbalance • Vestibular nystagmus is typically inhibited by visual fixation • It follows Alexander's law (nystagmus is greater in the direction of fast phases)

  20. Alexander's nystagmus grading • I degree - Present only during gaze in the direction of fast phase • II degree - Present during straight gaze and also increases in the direction of fast phase • III degree - Present during all fields of gaze, but greatest in the direction of fast phase

  21. History should include • Previous ear surgery • Previous head injury • Systemic diseases like diabetes / Hypertension • Use of ototoxic drugs • Noise exposure • Family h/o deafness • H/o atopy / allergy

  22. Inspection of external ear • Shape and size of pinna • Presence of tags, preauricular sinus and pits • Evidence of trauma to pinna • Skin condition over pinna and external canal • Presence of operative scar in post aural area and end aural region • Neoplastic lesions of pinna • Discharge from external canal

  23. Drug history / Occupation • Drugs like gentamycin, Streptomycin, and Aspirin can cause extensive damage to hair cells of cochlea • Noise exposure can cause damage to outer hair cells of cochlea • May be reversible during early phases

  24. Drug induced ototoxicity - Features • Bilateral sensorineural hearing loss • Bilaterally symmetrical hearing loss • Onset time - ??? • Can occur even after a single large dose • Vestibular injury - common (aminoglycosides) • Positional nystagmus - a feature of vestibular injury

  25. Aminoglycosides • Cleared more slowly from inner ear fluids than serum • There exists a latency - deafness may occur even 2 months after cessation of the treatment • Pts on potentially ototoxic aminoglycoside medications should be monitored atleast for a period of 6 months following cessation of the offending drug.

  26. Discharge • Duration • Quantity • Quality • Aggravating & releiving factors

  27. Acute ear discharge - Causes • ASOM - Blood tinged • Otomycosis - Itchy ear, fungal mass seen • CSF otorrhoea

  28. Profuse ear discharge - Causes • Chronic mastoiditis - Mastoid tenderness + May lead to formation of subperiosteal abscess • Mastoid reservoir - Mastoid tenderness on deep palpation + • Extradural abscess

  29. Quality of ear discharge • Mucoid - CSOM • Mucopurulent - CSOM with mastoiditis • Serous - asom • Serosanguinous - ASOM, Otitis externa • Watery - CSF

  30. Tinnitus • Subjective - perceived by the patient • Objective - perceived by both the pt and examiner

  31. Otalgia • Pain in the ear • Could be due to inflammatory pathology affecting the ear • Referred otalgia due to pathology elsewhere

  32. Three finger test • Index, middle and thumb are used. • Index finger is applied over mastoid process - tenderness indicates mastoiditis • Middle finger is applied over well of the concha - tenderness indicates inflammation in the mastoid antrum area • Thumb is used to apply pressure over mastoid process. Tenderness indicates mastoid emissary vein thrombophlebitis

  33. Peripheral vertigo • Is defined as sensation of unsteadiness / rotation • Commonly caused by inner ear disorders • Associated with tinnitus / ear block

  34. Peripheral vertigo - Features • It is fatigable • It is positional • Horizontal nystagmus • Cerebellar signs absent

  35. External ear • Shape / size of pinna • Tags / sinuses / pits • Evidence of trauma to pinna • Perichonditis • Seroma • Skin of pinna / external canal • Discharge from external canal • Evidence of previous surgery • Neoplasm

  36. External canal - Straightening • Aural speculum • Adults - Pinna is pulled postero superiorly • Infants - pinna is pulled posteriorly and downwards

  37. Ear drum • Oval / pearly white in color • Pars tensa • Attic • Cone of light • Handle / lateral process of malleus • Perforations

  38. Cone of light • Present in the antero inferior quadrant • Cone shaped • Caused due to orientation of middle fibrous layer • Broken up in retracted ear drums • Broken up / lost when ear drum bulges

  39. Color of ear drum • Pearly white - normal • Red drum - Glomus jugulare, AOM • Blue drum - SOM, Hemotympanum • Pink drum - Flamingo sign • Chalky drum - Tympanosclerosis

  40. Retraction pocket features • Prominent anterior and posterior malleolar folds • Apparent foreshortening of handle of malleus • Prominent lateral process of incus • Decreased / absent mobility of ear drum • Presence of pockets of retraction

  41. Siegel's speculum • Convex lens • Magnifies 2.5 times • Mobility of ear drum • To suck out secretions from middle ear • To apply ear drops by displacement method

  42. Tuning fork tests • Three frequencies are used • 256Hz, 512 Hz, 1024 Hz • These frequencies fall within speech range • Rinne, Weber and ABC

  43. Prerequisites of a good tuning fork • It should be made of good alloy • Should vibrate for one full minute • Should not produce overtones

  44. Rinne test • All three frequencies can be used • + Rinne (Air conduction better than bone conduction) • -ve Rinne (Bone conduction better than air conduction) • False positive Rinne (occurs in unilateral total hearing loss due to opposite ear hearing)

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