Ear disease 1 Flashcards

1
Q

How common is otitis in general and referral derm practice?

A

General
Dogs - 4.7% probably under-reported
Cats - 2.1%

Referral
Dogs - 50-70%
Cats - 10-30%

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2
Q

What are the different types of ear disease?

A

Pinnal disease
Diseases affecting the ear flap

Otitis externa
Inflammation of the outer ear

Otitis media
Inflammation of the middle ear

Otitis interna
Inflammation of the inner ear
See neurology

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3
Q

What do most pinnal disease in general practice reflect?

A

otitis externa

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4
Q

What pruritic and non-pruritic pinnal diseases affect the different parts of the pinna?

A
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5
Q

What is the correct definition of otitis externa?

A

OE = inflammatory disease of the external canal
* Inflammation
* Accompanied by 2˚ infection and canal changes

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6
Q

How is cerumen formed?

A

Lipids + sloughed keratinocytes

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7
Q

What organisms are part of the normal flora in the ear canal? What factors can cause microbial overgrowth (or dysbiosis)?

A

Organisms
- Gram +ve cocci predominate (but no growth in some dog’s ears)
* Similar species to those found on the skin
* Micrococcus spp.
* Coagulase negative staphylococci, Staphylococcus schleiferi and Staphylococcus pseudintermedius
* Streptococcus species
* Malassezia and many others

Factors causing overgrowth
* Humidity
* Inflammation (and swelling)
* Reduced epithelial migration
* Epithelial surface changes

Most commonly:
* Staphylococcus pseudintermedius
* Malassezia pachydermatis

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8
Q

What does PSPPP stand for when managing otitis externa?

A
  • Primary disease e.g. atopic dermatitis, Otodectes cyanotis
  • Secondary disease e.g. Malassezia, Staphylococci & Pseudomonas spp.
  • Predisposing factors e.g. Hairy &/or pendulous ears, stenosis
  • Perpetuating factors e.g. Ear canal hyperplasia, stenosis and scarring
  • Pain - Very common, difficult to manage in face of steroids
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9
Q

What are predisposing factors to otitis externa?

A

Conformation
* Excessive hair growth in canals (e.g. poodle)
* Hairy concave pinna (e.g. cocker spaniel)
* Pendulous pinna (e.g. basset hound)
* Stenotic canals (e.g. shar pei)

Excessive moisture
* Environment (heat & high humidity)
* Water (swimmer’s ear, grooming, cleaners)

Obstructive ear disease
* Feline apocrine cystadenomatosis
* Neoplasia & polyps

Primary otitis media
* Primary secretory otitis in CKCS, tumour or sepsis

Treatment effects
* Altered normal microflora (e.g. inappropriate cleaner)
* Trauma from cleaning or plucking

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10
Q

What are common primary causes of otitis externa?

A
  • Parasites
    • Otodectes cynotis
    • Demodex spp.
    • Scabies
  • Foreign bodies
    • Grass awns
  • Hypersensitivity
    • Atopic dermatitis, food hypersensitivity, medications
  • Keratinisation disorders
    • Primary idiopathic seborrhoea
    • Hypothyroidism
  • Glandular disorders
    • Cocker spaniels, English springer spaniels & Labrador retrievers have increased ceruminous glands
  • Miscellaneous
    • e.g. feline proliferative & necrotising otitis externa
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11
Q

How should you treat octodectes cyanotis?

A
  • Most ear creams are effective with localised disease
    • Selamectin or moxidectin spot-on
    • Likely that the isoxazoline group are effective
  • May need a cleaner ± steroids
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12
Q

What are the most common foreign bodies causing otitis externa?

A

Grass seeds

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13
Q

What are secondary causes of otitis externa?

A

Bacteria
* acute disease
* Gram-positive bacteria
* Staphylococcus species
* Streptococcus species
* Corynebacterium species
* chronic disease
* Gram-positive bacteria
* Enterococcus species
* Gram-negative bacteria
* Pseudomonas species
* Proteus species
* Escherichia coli

Fungi
* Acute & chronic disease
* Malassezia spp.(common)
* Malassezia pachydermatis
* Lipid dependent Malassezia spp.
* Candida spp. (uncommon)
* Aspergillus spp. (v. v. uncommon)

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14
Q

What are perpetuating factors of otitis externa?

A

Pathological changes in the external ear canal

  • Changes in canal wall
    • Inflammation causing failure of epithelial migration
    • Acute change: oedema, hyperplasia
    • Chronic change: proliferative change, canal stenosis, calcification of pericartilaginous fibrous tissue
  • Changes in glandular tissue
    • Hyperplasia of ceruminous and sebaceous glands, hidradenitis
  • Changes in the tympanum
    • Dilation, rupture, diverticulum (false middle ear – cholesteatoma)
  • Otitis media
    • Acute
      • foreign material
      • mucopurulent exudate
    • Chronic
      • biofilm formation
      • granulation material
      • bony change in the bulla
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15
Q

What are the clinical signs of OE?

A

Presenting reasons
* Aural / otic pruritus or headshaking
* Mild to marked exudate
* Malodour
* Head tilt
* Neurological or pain
* Deafness
* Often conduction
* May be toxic / neurological

Physical findings
- Erythema, swelling, scaling, discharge (otorrhea), malodour and pain
- Secondary
- pinnal lesions are common
- pyotraumatic dermatitis
- haematoma

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16
Q

What is the typical disease progression of OE?

A
  • Secondary disease follows the primary cause
  • Many / most cases are not presented until secondary disease is present
    • Malassezia
      • Staphylococci
      • Gram negative rods
    • If treated inadequately potential for anti-microbial resistance
    • In many cases Pseudomonas aeruginosa is end point

Progressive pathological changes occur with time
* Epidermal hyperkeratosis and hyperplasia
* Dermal oedema
* Fibrosis
* Ceruminal gland hyperplasia and dilation
* Abnormal epithelial cell migration
* Tympanic membrane alterations
* Otitis media (16% of acute OE, 50–80 % of chronic OE)

17
Q

What clinical signs are associated with otitis media?

A
  • Often non-specific – pain?
  • Most often signs of concurrent OE are the most obvious clinical signs
  • Deafness
  • Pain on eating
  • Signs of OI if progression

Horners: – sympathetic nerves to the face
* Drooping of the eyelid on the affected side (ptosis)
* The pupil of the affected eye will be constricted (miosis), or smaller than usual
* The affected eye often appears sunken (enophthalmos)
* The third eyelid of the affected eye may appear red and raised or protruded (conjunctival hyperemia)

Facial paralysis – CN VII
* Adult age Cocker Spaniels, Pembroke Welsh corgis, boxers, and English setters are most likely to experience this condition.

18
Q

What are the consequences on otitis media?

A
  • Conductive deafness
    • Loss of drum
    • High pressure fluid/mucous in the middle ear
    • Chronic OE or OM ± cholesteatoma
  • Horner’s syndrome / facial paralysis
    • Ear and lip droop, asymmetrical lips, dribbling
    • Keratoconjunctivitis sicca, neurogenic dry nose
    • Anisocoria with ipsilateral miosis, ptosis of the upper eyelid etc.
  • Vestibular syndrome (otitis interna [OI])
19
Q

How can you diagnose OM?

A
  • Appearance of the drum on video otoscopy
  • Sampling of the middle ear for
    • Bacteriology
    • Fungal culture
    • Cytology via myringotomy or ruptured TM
  • Palpation of granulation tissue in the middle ear
  • BAER (hearing testing)
  • Imaging
20
Q

How would you treat OM?

A

If intact drum
* Perform myringotomy and flush until clean
* Using cytology and culture data
* Use aqueous antibiotics (usually home prepared) 2-3 times a day following cleaning with saline or an appropriate aqueous cleaner (TRIZEDTA with 0.15 w/w chlorhexidine in dogs)
* Pain relief
* ? Role of systemic antibiotics

In severe cases
* Poor response to therapy
* Intractable OE
* Evidence of marked new bone on CT / radiographs

  • Consider total ear canal ablation and bulla osteotomy or bulla osteotomy
  • Seek advice from experienced or referral vets
21
Q

What is primary secretory otitis media?

A
  • Presented for deafness or neck pain!
  • Marked mucoid build-up in the middle ear
  • Bulging middle ear noted on otoscopy
  • Repeated flushing and myringotomy (3-5 times)
  • Sputolysin (mucolytic) and oral N-acetyl cysteine has been used by some
  • Steroids are used to reduce mucous production
22
Q

What are the indications for performing a myringotomy?

A
  • Bulging TM with pain or neurological signs (Horner’s, vestibular signs, facial paresis)
  • Tympanosclerosis (an “exploratory myringotomy”)
  • Radiographic/MRI bulla changes and intact TM
  • Evidence of tissue or fluid behind the TM
  • Medically unresponsive vestibular disease with an intact TM
  • Chronic otitis cases longer than 6 months that have not responded to treatment for otitis externa (requires judgement)
23
Q

What are the steps of a myringotomy?

A
  • Clean and dry the external ear canal
  • Incision may be made using a 5-French polypropylene catheter (cut end to make sharper) or an open-ended tomcat catheter or a small wire (clitoral) swab
  • Passed through either hand held or video otoscope
  • Position: caudoventral aspect of the pars tensa to avoid damaging the tympanic germinal epithelium and the structures of the middle ear.
  • Sampling: Pass swab(s) for cytology and bacteriology - instilling and then withdrawing a small amount of sterile saline solution
  • Flush with saline (± other agents depending on the cytology results)
24
Q

What is BAER? How is it performed?

A

Brainstem auditory evoked response
* Click applied to tested ear (white noise to other)
* Peaks of response respond to transition through differing structures (e.g. peak I = vestibulocochlear nerve)
* Normal dog – threshold <10dB

25
Q

Why is radiography insensitive for OM?

A
  • Insensitive way of assessing OM: see thickening of wall of the bulla in chronic disease
  • Lateral, lateral oblique and open mouth views.
  • Changes absent in many cases of OM
26
Q

What causes otitis interna? What clinical signs are associated? What are differential diagnoses?

A

Cause
* extension of OM (majority)
* haematogenous and ascending infection via the auditory tube
* adverse drug reaction

Clinical signs
* Head tilt to the affected side
* Spontaneous or rotatory nystagmus
* Asymmetric limb ataxia with preservation of strength
* Falling
* Vomiting and/or anorexia

Differential diagnoses
* Other peripheral vestibular diseases
* Idiopathic vestibular syndrome
* Neoplasia (vestibulocochlear nerve)
* Hypothyroidism

Seek advice from experienced or referral vets

27
Q

How would you diagnose and treat OI?

A
  • Establish the presence of systemic disease and/or localised disease (OE/OM)
  • Pruritus, headshaking and pain around the TMJ may be useful indicators of local disease
  • Complete neurological examination
  • Otic examination ± myringotomy
  • MRI (possibly CT)

In the absence of another cause, long term use of systemic antibiotics has been advocated.
* Ability to cross the BBB
* Based on culture of the middle ear?

28
Q

What are ototoxic neurological signs? What should you do?

A

Profound hearing loss and vestibular signs may be seen

  • Seek specialist advice / consider referral
  • Remove the product from the ear as soon as possible
    • Repeat cytology and bacteriology
    • Anaesthesia and flush the area gently with saline
  • Give high anti-inflammatory dose of dexamethasone systemically
  • Consider the use of appropriate antibiotics (choose a drug that crosses BBB)
  • Withdraw topical therapy temporarily
  • Report to the manufacturer / Veterinary Medicines Directorate