otitis external Flashcards

1
Q
A
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2
Q

definition of otitis externa

A

diffuse inflammation of skin and subdermis of ear canal, can include pinna or tympanic membrane
swimmer’s ear or tropical ear
acute = lasts less than 6wks
chronic = >3mo

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3
Q

bugs that cause otitis externa

A

acute - bacteria
* pseudomonas aeruginosa
* staph aureus

chronic - fungal
* aspergillus
* candida

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4
Q

what is malignant otitis externa

A

life threatening progressive infection of external ear canal
may spread to cause osteomyelitis of temporal bone and adjacent structures

pseudomonas aeruginosa

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5
Q

RF for acute otitis externa

A
  • skin conditions - eczema/psoriasis/seborrhoeic dermatitis - skin debris -> infection
  • acute otitis media
  • contact dermatitis
  • trauma - ear cleaning remove wax which is natural barrier to moisture and infection
  • foreign body insertion
  • water exposure
  • ear canal obstruction
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6
Q

RF for chronic otitis externa

A
  • skin conditions
  • DM / immunocomp
  • contact dermatitis
  • fungal infection
  • bacterial infection - low grade persistent infection -> thickening of ear canal, loss of normal skin structure, reduced ear wax production
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7
Q

causes of malignant otitis externa

A
  • uncontrolled dm / immunocomp
  • old age
  • radiotherapy to ear/head/neck -> skin atrophy/ulceration and damage to sebaceous glands = reduced wax
  • previous ear surgery/irrigation
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8
Q

complications of otitis externa

A
  • chronic
  • regional spread of infection -> cellulitis, perichondritis, chondritis, abscess, parotitis
  • fibrosis and stenosis of the ear canal
  • fibrosis of tympanic membrane
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9
Q

what suggests perichondritis

A

Erythema and swelling affecting the pinna but sparing the ear lobe

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10
Q

complications of malignant otitis externa

A
  • facial nerve palsy
  • osteomyelitis involving mastoid, temporal and basal skull bones
  • meningitis
  • brain abscess
  • sepsis
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11
Q

px of otitis externa

A

acute - clinical resolution in 10days
chronic - lumen can narrow -> stenosis -> hearing loss
malignant - life threatening

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12
Q

dx of acute otitis externa

A

At least one typical symptom (usually rapid-onset within 48 hours):
* ear canal itchy
* Ear pain and tenderness of the tragus and/or pinna (often severe), with possible jaw pain.
* Ear discharge
* Hearing loss due to ear canal occlusion

At least two typical signs:
* Tenderness of the tragus and/or pinna.
* The ear canal is red and oedematous, and there may be debris and discharge contributing to swelling and canal occlusion.
* Tympanic membrane erythema
* Cellulitis of the pinna and adjacent skin.
* Conductive hearing loss
* Tender regional lymphadenitis

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13
Q

when to suspect chronic otitis externa

A

Typical symptoms:
* Constant itch in the ear.
* Mild discomfort or pain (rare).

Typical signs:
* Lack of ear wax in the external ear canal.
* Dry scaly skin in the ear canal, often results in at least partial canal stenosis; or red, moist skin in the ear canal.
* Fluffy, cotton-like debris, hyphae, or dots of black debris - there is fungal infection.
* Conductive hearing loss.

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14
Q

when to suspect malignant otitis externa

A

Typical symptoms:

  • Unremitting disproportionate ear pain, headache, purulent otorrhoea, fever, or malaise.
  • Vertigo.
  • Profound conductive hearing loss.

Typical signs:

  • Systemically unwell, high fever.
  • Granulation tissue seen on the floor of the ear canal and at the bone-cartilage junction; exposed bone in the ear canal.
  • Ipsilateral facial nerve palsy.
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15
Q

ix for otitis externa

A

Consider arranging an ear swab for bacterial and fungal MCS if:
* Treatment failure.
* Severe, recurrent, or chronic otitis externa.
* Ear canal occlusion due to swelling and debris, causing difficulty using topical treatment effectively.
* Suspected spread of infection beyond the external ear canal.

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16
Q

mx of acute otitis externa

A

dont use cotton buds
keep ears clean and dry
* no swimming for 10days
* hair dryer to dry the ear canal after washing/bathing/swimming
* acetic acid drops/spray - morning, eve and after wet for max 7 days

mx RFs
analgesia
clean external canal to aid rx - dry swab secretions, ear irrigation (if tympanic membrane is intact)
consider topical abx +- steroid
oral abx if - immunocomp, severe infection, spread beyong external ear canal

17
Q

when to follow up after acute otitis externa

A
  • not improving within 48–72 hours
  • not fully resolved after 2 weeks
  • Symptoms are severe +- cellulitis spreading beyond the external ear canal.
  • immunocompromised and at risk of severe infection
  • There is ear wax impaction or stenosis of the ear canal which prevents the tympanic membrane being visualized, to check for an alternative cause for symptoms.
18
Q

mx of chronic otitis externa

A

advice, RF, analgesia
ear swab bacterial and fungal MCS
dry swabbing and irirgations
if signs of fungal infectiob - topical antifungal (clotrimazole), acetic acid
if bacterial - mx as for acute
**if no sign of bacteria/fungus - topical steroid drops **

follow up if
* sx persist
* immunocomp and risk of malignant otitis externa