Otitis Media Flashcards
OM - approach to treatment
- AOM vs OME
- Observation +/- Analgesia (Tylenol, Motrin, opioid if severe)
- Selective use of abx
Prevention - bf and Immunizations
OM - common organisms
Strep pneumo (gr + cocci) 25-50%
H. Influenza (gr - bacilli) 15-30%
Moraxella (gr- cocci) 3-20%
Viral 5-22%
Diagnosis of AOM requires:
- Acute s/s
- middle ear effusion (bulging, maybe drainage)
- middle ear inflammation
OM (severe) - DOC
If mod-severe otalgia and high fever get additional coverage against beta lactamase +, h.influenza and moraxella
Amoxicillin-clavulanate (augmentin) 90 mg/kg/d in 2 divided doses
OM - DOC
***Amoxicillin
80-90 mg/kg/d
Sufficient to cover susceptible and intermediate resistant pneumococci, low cost and safe.
Alt. macrolides (Azithro)
Duration of treatment - OM
<6 = 10 days 6+ = 5-7 days
OM - DOC if PCN allergic
If allergy not anaphylaxis or severe, give a Ceph:
Cefdinir (Omnicef)
If severe allergy:
Azithromycin
Bactrim
Rocephin IM
What if AOM does not respond to treatment in 48-72 hours?
If observation –> AMX
If AMX –> AMX-CLA
If AMX-CLA –> Ceftriaxone IM (if N/V) or clindamycin (PCN allergic)
OM - prevention
Vaccination - flu, PCV, Hib
OME - treatment
No abx
Monitor for hearing loss and/or learning problems (esp if >3 mos)
What differentiates AOM from OME?
In AOM, tympanic membrane is inflamed w/possible drainage. Needs abx.
Who meets criteria for obs for AOM vs OME?
6 mos - 2 yrs w/ non severe illness AND uncertain diagnosis
>2 yrs no severe illness OR uncertain diagnosis
Obs for 48-72 hrs
Which abx can be given as a one time dose if concerned about compliance for OM treatment?
Rocephin IM x 1
Why do you use a BLI like CLA (ex. Augmentin) when treating staph?
Because staph make beta-lactamase and strep does not. The BLI protects the abx.