OTITIS MEDIA
Definition
“It is an inflammation of middle ear that most often occur in infant &
young children but can occur at any age”
Incidence
Most common in children under 15 yr of age.
Types
Acute otitis media
Chronic otitis media
Other
o Serous otitis media
o Secretory otitis media
o Suppurative otitis media
Acute otitis media
Definition
“It is an acute infection of the middle ear, usually lasting less then 6
weeks”
Etiology
Bacteria
o eg. Streptococcus pneumoniae,
o H. Influenza
Upper respiratory tract infection
Infection nasopharynx
Pathophysiology
Due to etiological factor(URTI, Bacteria)
Exudates & edema in middle ear
Decrease retraction of tympanic membrane
Serous exudates in middle ear
Pus formation
Tympanic membrane rupture
It occur the acute otitis media
Clinical features
Otorrhea
Otalgia
Fever
Rhinitis
Tympanic membrane erythema, may be perforated
Hearing loss
Irritability
Diagnosis
History
Physical examination
Otoscopic examination
Culture
Audiometry & Tympanometry
Medical Management
Antibiotic
Analgesic
Antihistamine
Surgical management
Myringotomy or tympanotomy (incision in the tympanic membrane)
Complication
Chronic otitis media
Hearing loss
Perforation
Poor speech develop
Chronic otitis media
Definition
“It is a long standing infection of a part of whole of the middle year
characterised by ear discharge & permanent perforation”
OR
“Inflammation of the middle ear that lasts for more than 6 weeks”
Incidence
Common in the age 3-6
Etiology
Inappropriate treatment of acute otitis media.
URTI, Allergic rhinitis
Breastfeeding and long time group child care
Eustachian tube deformity
Septal deviation, cleft palate, sinusitis
Types
Suppurative (+ perforation)
o atico-antral type
o Tubo-tympanic type
Non suppurative Mucoid or serous
Atico-antral chronic otitis media
Inflammation involves bones (e.g. mastoid, tympanic ring, ossicles )
Tubo-tympanic otitis media
Acute otitis media
permanent perforation
muco-purulent discharge.
Serous Otitis media
Stages
URTI or acute otitis media–> Fluid collection in middle ear and
obstruction of eutachian tube
tympanic membrane retraction. Fluid become pus like
necrosis
Tympanic membrane perforation. Could end up with mastoiditis ( if not
stopped ).
Medical management
careful suctioning of the ear under microscopic guidance.
Instillation of antibiotic drops Surgical management
tympanoplasty
Ossiculoplasty (surgical reconstruction of the middle ear bones to restore
hearing)
Mastoidectomy
Assessment
Collect health history includes
o a complete description of the ear problem.
o Collect data about the duration and intensity of the problem, its
causes, and previous treatments.
o Obtain Information about other health problems and medications
Physical assessment includes
o observation for erythema, edema, otorrhea, lesions, and
characteristics such as odor and color of discharge.
Diagnosis
Pain R/T Infection
Risk for infection R/T eustachian tube dysfunction.
Altered auditory sensory perception R/T Fluid in the middle year.
Anxiety R/T surgical procedure, potential loss of hearing
Risk for trauma R/T balance difficulties or vertigo during the immediate
postoperative period
Disturbed sensory perception R/T potential damage to facial nerve
(cranial nerve VII).
knowledge deficient R/T disease, surgical procedure,and postoperative
care.
MENIERE'S DISEASE
Defiition
Meniere's disease (idiopathic endolymphatic hydrops) is a disorder of the inner
ear associated with a symptoms consisting of
spontaneous, episodic attacks of vertigo
sensori neural hearing loss which usually fluctuates
tinnitus
sensation of aural fullness.
Incidence
Roughly 1 in 1000 individuals are affected
Constitutes 10% of all patients attending vertigo clinic
Female preponderance Rare in children under the age of 10
Commonly begins between 3th to 6th decades of life
Bilateral Meniere’s syndrome is seen in 5% of these patients
Types of meniere's disease
Classical Meniere’s disease
Vestibular Meniere’s disease – vestibular symptoms and aural pressure
Cochlear Meniere’s disease – cochlear symptoms and aural pressure
Lermoyez syndrome – Reverse Meniere’s
Tumarkin’s crisis – Utricular Meniere’s
Lermoyez syndrome
This is a variant of Meniere’s disease. It is characterized by sudden sensori
neural hearing loss which improves during or immediately after the attack of
vertigo.
Tumarkin’s drop attacks
abrupt falling attacks of brief duration without loss of consciousness. due
to excess endolymphatic volume. Utricular crisis is used to indicate this
condition.
In the later disease stages the valve of Bast remaining patent may cause
sudden drainage of endolymph from the utricle due to longitudinal flow
resulting in these drop attacks
Several pathophysiological mechanisms are thought to be implicated in
the otolithic catastrophe of Tumarkin:
sudden shift of the utricular macula, sudden changes in the
endolymphatic fluid pressure, and sudden electrolyte changes secondary
to the rupture of the membrane labyrinth.
Thus, the inappropriate stimulation of the otolithic organs might generate
a failure of the vestibulospinal reflex with the loss of postural tonus and,
consequently, the falling
Etiology
Genetic
Autonomic
Endocrine
Pathophysiology
Theories behind endolymphatic hydrops
Obstruction of endolymphatic duct/sac
Hypoplasia of endolymphatic duct/sac
Alteration of absorption of endolymph
Alteration in production of endolymph
Autoimmune insult
Vascular origin
Viral etiology
Pathology
Defective absorption by endolymphatic sac
Poor vascularity of sac
Less absorptive tubular epithelium
increased peri saccular fibrosis
Rupture of reissner’s membreane leading to mixing of perilymph &
endolymph- Schuknecht
allow leakage of the potassium-rich endolymph into the perilymph,
bathing the eighth cranial nerve and lateral sides of the hair cells
Histopathological changes
Loss of shorter stereocilia of outer hair cell first occuring in the apical
region
Outer hair cell->inner hair cell->intercellular edema b/w marginal
cell->vacuolization- >atrophy of marginal and intermediate cells->
loss of spiral ganglion cell
High concentrations of extracellular potassium depolarize the nerve
cells, causing their acute inactivation.
The result is a decrease in auditory and vestibular neuronal outflow
consistent with the hearing loss and features of acute vestibular
paralysis seen in a typical Meniere's attack
The chronic deterioration in inner ear function presumably is the
effect of repeated exposure to the effects of the potassium
Mechanism of meniere’s disease
Hearing loss
Sensori neural in nature
Fluctuating and progressive
Affects low frequencies
Mild low frequency conductive hearing loss (rare)
Profound sensori neural hearing loss (End stage)
Tinnitus
Roaring in nature
subjective
Could be continuous / intermittent
Non pulsatile in nature
Frequency of tinnitus corresponds to the region of cochlea which has
suffered the maximum damage
Investigations
Tuning forks tests : SNHL
PTA
Speech audiometry
Recruitment test +ve
SISI >70%
Tone decay <20 dB
Caloric testing – canal paresis
ENG
Head Thurst test
ECoG – SP is larger & more negative
SP/AP ratio increases > 30%
Dehydration/Glycerol test
VEMP (Vestibular evoked myogenic potentials) elevated threshold
Loudness recruitment
This is abnormal growth in the perceived intensity of sound
This is usually positive in patients with Meniere’s disease
ABLB (alternate binaural loudness balance test)is the test used to look
for the presence of recruitment
This test is really time consuming
Electro cochleography
Increased summating potential / action potential ratio. 1:3 is normal
Widened summating potential / action potential complex. A widening of
greater than 2 ms is significant
Vestibular tests
Not mandatory for diagnosis of Meniere’s disease
Caloric test is still performed
It is low frequency stimulation (0.003 Hz) of lateral canal
Caloric asymmetry will point to the diseased ear 5. 20% difference
between the two ears (Jongkee’s formula) is significant
Vemp
Vestibular evoked myogenic potential
Measures the relaxation of sternomastoid muscle in response to
ipsilateral click stimulus
Brief high intensity ipsilateral clicks produce large short latency
inhibitory potentials (VEMP) in the toncially contracted Ipsilateral
sternomastoid muscle
This test is due to the presence of vestibulo collic reflex
Afferent arises from sound responsive cells in the saccule, conducted via
the inferior vestibular nerve.
Efferent is via vestibulo spinal tract
Normal responses are composed of biphasic (positive-negative) waves
VEMP reveals saccular dysfunction
Dehydration tests
Glycerol
Frusemide
Isosorbide
test is considered positive if
there isa 10-dB or more improvement in pure tone thresholds at 2 or
more frequencies (250 to 2000 Hz), or
there is a 12% or greater improvement in speech discrimination
score.
Glycerol test
First introduced by Klockhoff and Lindblom – 1966
Glycerol is administered in doses of 1.5 mg/kg body wt in empty
stomach
Serum osmolality should increase at least by 10 mos/kg
Side effects include Headache, Nausea, vomiting, drowsiness
PTA is performed 2-3 hours after administration
False positivity is rare
Positivity depends on the phase of the disease
Management
Conservative treatments include lifestyle and dietary
adjustments,diuretics, and supplemental use of vestibular suppressants.
Invasive or destructive procedures are indicated only in the 5% to 10%
of patients with Meniere’s disease who fail conservative and medical
measures.
Overall, vertigo control is achieved in more than 99% of patients with
Meniere’s disease.
Medical management
Dietary management
Physiotherapy
Psychological support
Pharmacological intervention
Treatment of acute exacerbation
Intravenous fluids – dehydration
Vestibular suppressants – May delay recovery / rehabilitation process
Corticosteroids – May help if tinnitus and deafness are debilitating
Low salt diet
Frustenberg diet
2 grams / 24 hours (restricted salt intake)
Life style modification
Role of diuretics
Diuretics play a vital role in alleviating acute symptoms
This has been in use since 1930’s
Thiazide group of drugs are commonly used
Frusemide may be used to alleviate acute symptoms
Clear scientific evidence is lacking regarding the usefulness of diuretics
Betahistine
Cochlear vascular insufficiency has been proposed as one of the
mechanism of Meniere's disease
Betahistine is supposed to cause vasodilatation of cochlear blood vessels
Betahistine has weak H1 agonistic property and considerable H3
antagonist properties
It reduces the frequency & intensity of vertigo. Has minimal effect on
tinnitus
Doesn’t help much with hearing loss
Other treatment modalities (ancillary)
Stress reduction
Patient education
Hearing aids – can be used to suppress troublesome tinnitus
Tinnitus retraining
Vibrator therapy
Meniett Device
Low pressure pulse generator
Vibrations are transmitted via external auditory canal
Vibrations alter inner ear fluid dynamics by their effects on the oval and
round windows
Exact mechanism of action is not known
It is totally non invasive
This device is portable
Vibrator therapy steps
Diagnosis should be confirmed
Ventilation tube should be inserted
Patient should be trained for self administration of the treatment
Usually administered thrice a day about 5 mins each time
Treatment lasts for 5 weeks
Indications for vibrator therapy
Classic unilateral Meniere’s disease
Intense vestibular / cochlear symptoms
Failed medical therapy
Over 65 years of age
Imbalance / aural fullness / tinnitus after gentamycin treatment
Intratympanic gentamycin
Fixed dose protocol is used
40 mg/ml gentamycin is buffered with soda bicarb (pH6.4) final
concentration 26.7mg/ml.
T tube grommet inserted into the postero inferior quadrant of ear drum. A
mcirocatheter is inserted through the grommet
1ml of gentamycin solution is injected into the middle ear cavity via the
microcatheter
Three injections are given per day in outpatient setting 6. Injections are
given for 4 days
After injection patient should lie supine with the infiltrated ear up for 30
mins
Vertigo usually develops between 2-4 days after cessation of treatment
Surgical management
Sac enhancement procedure
Sac decompression procedure
Labyrinthine ablative procedures
Endolymphatic Sac Surgery
Decompression: Removal of bone overlying the sac
Shunting: Placement of synthetic shunt to drain endolymph into mastoid
Drainage: Incision of the sac to allow drainage
Removal of sac: Excision of the sac
Ablative procedures
Labyrinthectomy
Translabyrinthine vestibular neurectomy
Retrolabyrinthine vestibular neurinectomy
Retrosigmoid vestibular neurinectomy
Middle cranial fossa vestibular neurinectomy
Shunt procedure
External shunts – Drains the sac into mastoid cavity / subarachnoid space
Internal shunts – Drains excessive endolymph into the perilymphatic
space (cochleosacculotomy / labyrinthotomy)
Cochleosacculotomy / labyrinthotomy
Helpful in treating debilitated patients
Involves disruption of osseous spiral lamina
Angular pick introduced via round window towards oval window. It will
accommodate 3 mm long pick
After perforation the pick is withdrawn and the round window is sealed
by fat
HEARING AND HEARING LOSS
Definition
Hearing- transduction of sound to neural impulses and its interpretation
by the CNS
Hearing loss- defect at any level from sound transduction to
interpretation
Types of hearing loss
Conductive- sound is not conducted efficiently through the outer ear
canal to the eardrum and the tiny bones (ossicles) of the middle ear
Sensorineural (SNHL)- damage to the inner ear (cochlea), or to the nerve
pathways from the inner ear to the brain.
Mixed
Central- Problem lies in the central nervous system
Known causes
Hereditary sensorineural hearing loss
Hereditary- 1/3 of all cases of SNHL
Syndromic- Usually present at birth usually AR
Ex; Treacher-Collins syndrome
Non-syndromic- based on onset
Congenital form
Late onset form- more common, tend to be AD, manifested after birth
Noise induced hearng loss
Can cause direct mechanical trauma to cochlea
Acute acoustic trauma- sudden intense sound event of short duration
Exceeds 140 db and pressure rise is very short (<1.5ms)
Ex; gunshot
Blast injury- pressure wave from an explosive blast
Exceeds 140db but duration of pressure rise is longer (>2ms)
longer frequency spectrum
Ruptured tympanic membrane
Noise induced hearng loss
Acute noise-induced hearing loss- high levels of continuous or
intermittent noise for seconds to hours
Often reversible or partially reversible
muffled sensation and tinnitus
Ex; loud power tools, rock concerts, engine noise
Chronic noise-induced hearing loss- irreversible cochlear hearing loss
Typical features of sensorneural hearing loss
Tinnitus can be constant
Safe if levels below 85db for 8hrs/day
Traumatic injury to inner ear
Functional- labyrinthine concussion
Structural- labyrinthine contusion
Temporal bone fracture
Impact to the skull- accelerating and decelerating forces
Barotrauma
Symptoms: nonspecific vertiginous complaints and hearing impairment
Labyrinthitis
Infection or inflammatory process affecting the labyrinth or its
surrounding 3 routes: Tympanogenic, meningeal and hematogenous
Tympanogenic- infection/inflammation maybe transmitted through oval
or round window
Acute toxic (serous labyrinthitis)- labyrinth itself is not infected;
becomes inflamed by substances released in middle ear.
Acute supporative- bacterial infection of middle ear spreads to labyrinth.
Chronic Labyrinthitis- manifested as inner ear damage.
Chronic otitis media as possible cause
Ototoxicity
Toxic damage to inner ear affects both cochlear and vestibular functions
Endogenous or exogenous
Effects generally symmetrical
Symptom: Tinnitus maybe initial presenting symptom
Unknown causes
Presbyacusis
Age related (over 50 yr old), symmetrical SNHL
Ageing process
Endogenous genetic predisposition
Cummulative exposure to exogenous factors
Symptoms: Speech recognition more affected than pure tone
Diagnosis: Pure tone audiometry- symmetrical SNHL (High tone loss)
Sudden sensorineural hearing loss
Immediate, unilateral hearing loss with no apparent external cause.
Symptomatic or Idiopathic
Idiopathic- cause: Viral, vascular, autoimmune
Symptoms: within seconds to hours. Mild loss of hearing to sudden
deafness
Vestibular symptoms less common
Chronic, progressive, idiopathic sensorineural hearing loss
Bilateral SNHL
Onset before age 50
Etiology unknown
Symptoms: Variable- sudden hearing loss or progress gradually
Frequently associated by tinnitus
Vestibular symptoms generally absent
Test for auditory function
Tuning Fork test
Pure tone audiometry
Speech audiometry
Tympanometry
Tuning fork test
Differentiate between conductive and SNHL
Weber and Rinne test
Weber- TF placed in midline of skull. Vibrations are transmitted by bone
conduction
Normal- Vibrations perceived equally on L+R
SNHL- Lateralizes to better ear
CHL-Lateralizes to affected ear
Rinne- compares level of air and bone conduction in the same ear.
AC test- TF just outside the ear canal
BC test- TF firmly against mastoid
Normal: AC>BC
CHL: BC>AC
SNHL: AC>BC but both equally depreciated
Pure tone audiometry
used to identify hearing threshold levels of an individual, enabling
determination of the degree, type and configuration of a hearing loss.
NORMAL HEARING - both air and bone conduction will be
superimposed at each test frequency between 0 to 10 dB.
CONDUCTIVE HEARING LOSS - air conduction is < normal bone
conduction.
SENSORINEURAL HEARING LOSS - both air and bone conduction
below normal threshold at any frequency tested
Mixed hearing loss
Tympanometry
an examination used to test the condition of the middle ear and mobility
of the eardrum (tympanic membrane) and the conduction bones by
creating variations of air pressure in the ear canal.
Permits a distinction between sensorineural and conductive hearing loss,
when evaluation is not apparent via Weber and Rinne testing.
Can be helpful in making the diagnosis of otitis media by demonstrating
the presence of a middle ear effusion.
A- Normal
AD- abnormally compliant
AS- Stiff (otosclerosis)
B- Presence of non-compressible fluid within middle ear space(Otitis
Media)
C-Eustachian tube dysfunction
VERTIGO
Definition
Not a disease, But a symptom.
A feeling in which the external world seems to revolve around the
individual or in which the individual itself seems to revolve in space.
Types
Rotation
o Rotatory
o Non-rotatory
Patient’s perception
o Subjective
o Objective
Stimulus involved Spontaneous Induced
Physiological Vertigo
Balance between 3 stabilising sensory systems is lost.
Non-adaptation of vestibular system to unfamiliar head movements.
Unusual head & neck positions
Peripheral & Central Vertigo
Peripheral: Lesions of vestibular end organs ( 85% of all cases of
vertigo)
Intermediate: Lesions in vestibular nerve
Central: Lesions of central nervous system(vestibular nuclei) ( 15% of all
cases)
Peripheral & Central Vertigo
Central Vertigo Vascular causes:
Hypertension, Basilar artery insufficiency
Epilepsy: both disease & its treatment
Road Traffic Accident: Head trauma Tumor: of brainstem, 4th ventricle
& cerebellum
Infection: Meningitis, Encephalitis Glial diseases: Multiple sclerosis
Others: Parkinsonism, Psychogenic
Peripheral Causes for Vertigo
BPPV
Vestibular Neuronitis
Meniere’s disease
Labrynthitis
Vestibulotoxic Drugs
Perilymph Fistula
Head injuries & Surgical trauma
Syphillis
Evaluation of Vertigo
Tests for assessment of Vestibular functions
Clinical tests
Laboratory tests
Clinical Tests of Vestibular Function
Spontaneous Nystagmus
Fistula test
Romberg Test
Gait
Past-Pointing & Falling
Dix Hallpike Maneuver
Test of Cerebellar Dysfunction
Nystagmus
Involuntary rhythmical oscillatory movement of the eyes.
Triggered by inner ear stimulation.
Slow pursuit movement initially, fast rapid resetting phase
Nystagmus is always named after direction of the fast phase Nystagmus
Based on Direction Rotatory/ Tortional Horizontal Vertical
Laboratory Tests
Caloric Test
Electronystagmography
Optokinetics
Rotational Test
Galvanic Test
Posturography
Caloric test
Principle:
To induce nystagmus by thermal stimulation of the vestibular system
Advantages
Each labryinth can be tested separately
Also checks for labrynthine origin of vertigo
Types
Modified Kobrak Test: 60°, 60 s, Ice water
Fitzgerald-Hallpike Test/Bithermal Caloric Test:
Supine position
Water at 30° & 44°
Head tilt: 30° forward
5 mins gap b/w 2 ears
Direction of Nystagmus: COWS Cold- Same Warm- Opposite 3. Cold
air caloric test: Done in TM perforation
Electronystagmography
Detects both Spontaneous and Induced nystagmus.
Depends on presence of Corneo-retinal potentials
Optokinetic Test
Useful to diagnose a Central lesion
Rotation Test
Barany’s Revolving chair, 30° forward head tilt
Galvanic test
Only test which helps in differentiating end organ lesion from that of
nerve lesion. Posturography
Treatment of Vertigo
Reassurance/Psychological Support
Pharmacotherapy
Adaptation exercises
Intratympanic antibiotic injections
Surgery
Conservative
Destructive
BENIGN PAROXYSMAL POSITIONAL VERTIGO
Definition
Abnormal sensation of motion that is elicited by certain provocative
positions.
These provocative positions usually trigger specific eye movements i.e.
Nystagmus Rotational Geotropic Latency: 1- 5 s Duration: 20-30 s
Fatiguable Associated with Vertigo Reversible
Signs & Symptom
symptoms
Sudden Onset
Have few asymptomatic periods in between
Dizziness triggered by head movements
Classic BPPV: erect to supine, 45°
During attacks, Rolling spin
Symptoms dissipate within 20-30 s after a violent start.
Signs
Neurological examination: Normal
Dix-Hallpike maneuver:
Caloric Test: Normal or Hypofunctional
Investigations
Electronystagmography(ENG)
Caloric Test
Audiometry
Posturography
Treatment Medical
Wait & watch
Vestibulo-suppressant medication
Vestibular Rehabilitation: Cawthorne exercises
Canalith repositioning (CRP):
Epley Maneuver
Semont maneuver
Surgical (failure of CRP)
Labyrinthectomy
Posterior canal Occlusion
Singular neurectomy
Vestibular nerve section
Transtympanic Aminoglycoside application
TINNITUS
Definition
Any sound that is perceived by the listener that does not originate from an
external sound source May be perceived in one or both ears (peripheral)
and/or in the head (central)
60% bilateral
30% unilateral
10% central
From latin word, tinniere, which means “to ring”
Descriptive Labels
Ringing
Hissing
Buzzing
Roaring
Clicking
Ocean sound
Cicadas
Pulsing
Heartbeat
Causes
Most commonly caused by some sort of change to the auditory system
80% of patient’s with SNHL have tinnitus Hearing loss results in
changes in the neural activity of the auditory system, which the auditory
cortex interprets as sound
Much like phantom limb syndrome. Areas of the cochlea where there is
hair cell damage can no longer amplify sounds where damage has
occurred so a phantom sound is interpreted by the brain.
Other Causes
Hearing loss, especially in cases of noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL)
External or middle ear issues (wax, fluid)
Acoustic neuroma (UNILATERAL tinnitus)
Medications Sinus/allergy issues
Dental issues (TMJ-temporal-mandibular joint syndrome)
Medications that cause tinnitus
Anti-inflammatories
Antibiotics
Antidepressants
Aspirin
Quinine
Loop diuretics
Chemotherapy drugs
Types
Subjective - Can only be perceived by the patient Most common type
(95%)
Objective - Can be heard by others Rare (<5% of all tinnitus cases)
Usually pulsatile (in sync with heartbeat) Causes: vascular or muscular
Causes of Objective Tinnitus
Vascular
Arteriorvenous aneurysm
Glomus jugulare tumor Muscular
Patent eustachian tube
Palatal myoclonus: involuntary muscle jerk of the roof of the mouth
Spasm of stapedius or tensor tympani muscles
Bothersome/Uncompensated Tinnitus
Only about 20% of people with tinnitus are bothered by it The tinnitus
itself isn’t the problem. The person’s REACTION to it is what is
problematic.
Tinnitus may result in irritability, fatigue/sleep disturbance, depression,
suicidal thoughts These patient’s need to be referred to a mental health
professional
A Viscious Cycle
Attentional Factors (patient chooses to attend to tinnitus)
Emotional reaction
Limbic system: negative emotional labeling of the tinnitus Autonomic
system: activation of the fight-or-flight mechanism (Can this tinnitus
harm me?) Stress
Amplification of tinnitus signal (louder)
Treatment
Surgery (uncommon option)
Medication (usually xanax, valium, antidepressants)
Dietary restrictions (caffeine, alcohol, salt, MSG)
Masking
Counseling
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Tinnitus Retraining Therapy
Sound treatment
Neuromonics
Masking
Use of noise to temporarily mask or “cover up” the tinnitus so it cannot
be perceived This is often successfully accomplished when patient’s with
hearing loss use traditional hearing aids. The amplification of
environmental noises often reduces or completely masks tinnitus.
Our newest generation hearing aids have optional tinnitus maskers built-
in for when hearing aids aren’t enough to mask tinnitus
There are companies that manufacture tinnitus maskers for those with
normal hearing. May be in-the-ear with a very large vent or a behind-the-
ear, open-ear device
The use of a sound machine or external noise source (i.e. ceiling fan) can
be very helpful at night Different types of noise are utilized in masking:
white noise, pink noise, brown noise, grey noise (all have varying
complexity based on frequency components)
Tinnitus Handicap Inventory
Patient self-survey Sample questions
Do you feel you have no control over your tinnitus? Because of your
tinnitus do you feel tired? Because of your tinnitus do you feel depressed?
Does your tinnitus make you feel anxious? Quantifies the severity of
tinnitus
Rates degree of handicap from slight to catastrophic
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy
Jastreboff created TRT Combines counseling with use of noise generators
Counseling
Reclassify tinnitus to a category of neutral signals Sound therapy: weaken
the tinnitus-related neural activity Goal: Habituation to the tinnitus (no
longer pay attention to it)
Neuromonics
Six to eight month therapy protocol Uses spectrally modified music that
has been tailored according to each patient’s hearing and tinnitus
characteristics
Combined with an underlying neural stimulus
Retrains the brain to filter out tinnitus disturbance Very expensive~$5000
for treatment that lasts less than a year
Other Sound Disorders
Hyperacusis - Everyday sounds seem “too loud” or “uncomfortable”
About ½ of those with tinnitus, also have hyperacusis
Affects 1 in 50,000
Causes
Hearing loss
Head injury (i.e air bag deployment)
Ototoxicity Lyme disease
Viral infections involving the inner ear or facial nerve (Bell’S palsy) TMJ
PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder)
Chronic fatigue syndrome
Epilepsy
Depression
Migraine headaches
IMPACTED CERUMEN
Introduction
Ear Wax (Cerumen) is a natural protective oily substance which is
produced in the outer third of the ear canal.
Its function is to remove small foreign particles, such as dust, from the
canal.
This is achieved by the ciliary hairs.
Definition
Excess collection of thick ear wax is known as impacted wax.
Symptoms
Diminished hearing – often of sudden onset after “cleaning” the ears
Discomfort – seldom complain of pain unless the wax is pressing on the
drum
Tinnitus occasionally
Educational Points
Wax is a normal physiological substance which has an important role in
protecting the ear canal The ear canal is a self-cleaning system, do not to
use cotton buds as wax is more likely to be pushed back against the
eardrum and become impacted.
Ear wax only needs to be removed if it causes symptoms or if a proper
view of the eardrum is needed.
Primary Care Treatment
In more severe cases use of a ceruminolytic ear drop for 4 to 5 days prior
to syringing is advisable
Removal with wax hook is also an option
Formby cerumen hook and scoop
Self Care Ear drops to soften ear wax (ceruminolytics) may be used as the
only treatment in mild cases.
There are many different preparations on the market, none with any clear
clinical advantage compared to the others.
Sodium bicarbonate may be effective at disintegrating ear wax.
A simple home remedy is olive oil, warmed by pouring onto a warm
spoon.
Preparations containing organic solvents are particularly likely to cause
irritation and inflammation of the external ear canal and should be
avoided
Ear Irrigation - Ear irrigation to improve hearing in those with impacted
wax The lowest pressure possible should be used.
It is best avoided if
o the eardrum is known or suspected to be perforated
o there is a history of mastoid surgery or chronic middle ear disease
o If patient has unilateral deafness
o A history of recurrent otitis externa or tinnitus
PERICHONDRITIS
Definition
It refers to inflammation involving the perichondrium of the external ear,
auricle, &external auditory canal.
However, it is commonly used to describe continuum of conditions of
the external ear from erysipelas(infection of overlying skin) through
cellulitis(infection of the soft tissue)& true perichondritis to
chondritis( infection involving the cartilage itself).
Classification
A practical classification might be:
o Erysipelas of external ear
o Cellulitis of external ear
Etiology
Perichondritis usually happens secondary to trauma. Such trauma may
include
laceration,
surgery
frost bite
burns,chemical injury
infection of a haematoma of the pinna, high piercing of the
cartilaginous portion of the auricle for the insertion of earring.
The most common organism pseudomonas aeruginosa, &
staphalococcus aureus.
Diagnosis
The diagnosis of perichondritis is clinical & a background of underlying
trauma to external ear should be sought. The lobule contains no cartilage,
is spared. Dull pain & sign of inflammation involving the cartilaginous
pinna is enough to diagnosis.
Outcomes
If untreated , a subperichondrial abscess may develop , leading to
avascular necrosis of the underlying cartilage, marked deformity of the
pinna. Management options; Prevention; acute perichondritis should be
prevented by careful placement of ear piercing away from the
cartilaginous pinna. Haematoma of the auricle should be drained
promptly.
Management
The meticulous management of the burn injuries to the ears should
include the use of prophylactic antibiotic against Gram-negative bacteria
& diligent local care including daily dressing &removal of eschars &
crust. First line management The mildest forms are treated with oral &
topical antibiotic.
If there is any discharge or abscess needs draining, a pus swab should be
sent for C/S.
Prompt treatment with broad –spectrum antibiotic possibly I/V.
Subperichondrial abscesses require incision & drainage but only when
definite fluctuation is present, as premature incision may result in further
spread of the infection.
Resistant cases Nonresponse to the above treatment ,accompanied by
persistent pain , suppuration need further intervation. Dowling ; Advocate
aggressive excision of necrosed cartilage including overlying
subcutaneous tissues & skin.
However, it is difficult to decide how much cartilage to excise. Repeated
debridement may be needed.
Stevenson advocates a system of continuous drainage & irrigation with
antibiotic & steroid solution as an alternative to preservation of the
structure, fenetrated polyethylene tubes are placedin the subperiosteal
tunnels on either side of the cartilage& aminoglycoside /steroid solution
to irrigate these twice daily.
Best clinical practice Considerd broad-spectum antibiotic ( including anti-
pseudomonas) prophylaxis in severely traumatized or burnt pinna. Early
use of local & systemic antibiotic including antipseudomonas if
perichondritis is suspected.
In resistant cases, add effective local antibiotic delivered by irrigation.
Conservative surgery for drainage of abscesses, creation of irrigation &
excision of necrotic cartilage with preservation of the perichondrium
wherever possible.
LABYRINTHITIS
Definition
Labyrinthitis Inflammation of the labyrinth of the inner ear.
Etiology
Viral or bacterial infections
Cholesteatoma
Drug toxicity
Head injury
Tumour
Vasculitis
Clinical manifestations
Vestibular manifestations (vertigo)
Cochlear manifestations (hearing loss)
Nausea and vomiting
Pathology
Infection usually occurs by one of three routes:
From the meninges
From the middle ear space
Hematogenous spread
Meningogenic: through the IAC, cochlear aqueduct, both (bilateral)
Tympanogenic: extension of infection from the middle ear, mastoid cells
or petrous apex-most common through the round or oval window
(unilateral)
Hematogenous: through blood, least common 6
Bacterial Infections Two types of labyrinthitis associated with bacterial
infections:
Toxic Labyrinthitis
Suppurative Labyrinthitis
Toxic Labyrinthitis
Toxic Labyrinthitis: results from a sterile inflammation of the inner ear
following an acute or chronic otitis media or early bacteria meningitis.
Toxins penetrate the round window, IAC, or cochlear aqueduct and cause
an inflammatory reaction in the perilymph space.
Bacterial Infection Toxic Labyrinthitis produces mild high frequency
hearing loss or mild vestibular dysfunction Treatment: Antibiotics for
precipitating otitis, possible myringotomy.
Suppurative Labyrinthitis
Suppurative Labyrinthitis: direct invasion of the inner ear by bacteria.
From otitis or meningitis
Suppurative Labyrinthitis: 4 stages
Serous or irritative: production of Ig rich exudates in the perilymph
Acute or purulent: bacterial and leukocyte invasion of the perilymphatic
scala-end organ necrosis
Fibrous or latent: proliferation of fibroblasts and granulation tissue in the
perilymph
Osseous or sclerotic: new bone deposition throughout the involved
labyrinth
Diagnosis
History
o severe vertigo from any movement of the head.
o Nausea and vomiting
o U/L or B/L hearing loss
o Recent URTI
o Loss of balance and falling in the direction of the affected ear.
Physical findings
o Spontaneous nystagmus
o Jerking movements of eyes toward unaffected ear
o Purulent discharge
Lab
o Culture and sensitivity test
Audiometry
A flat tympanogram
Electronystagmography
Management
Meclizine to relieve vertigo
Antiemetics
Antibiotics
Oral fluids
IV fluids for severe dehydration
Surgery
Surgical excision of cholesteatoma
Incision and drainage
Labyrinthectomy
Complications
Meningitis
Permanent balance disability
Permanent hearing loss
FURUNCULOSIS
Definition
Furunculosis is a localized form of otitis externa resulting from infection
of a single hair follicle
Etiology & Risk factors
Staphylococcus aureus
Heat, Humidity, Trauma, Maceration
Colonization of the external nares and, less commonly, the perineum with
the pathogenic strain of S. aureus is also a contributing factor in many
cases of generalized recurrent furunculosis.
Associated conditions causing it are hypogammaglobulinaemia, diabetes
mellitus and dysphagocytosis.
Pathology
Bacterial invasion of a single hair follicle results initially in a well-
circumscribed deep skin infection.
As the infection progresses a pustule forms and this progresses to local
abscess formation, often with considerable associated Cellulitis and
oedema. (Deep skin infection Pustule Abscess Cellulitis and oedema)
Bacteria attach initially to the cells of the stratum corneum and
proliferate around the ostium of the hair follicle. There is deeper invasion
of the hair follicle between the inner and outer root sheath.
Diagnosis
Histology is the reference standard for diagnosis (but not done is routine
clinical practice)
The affected ear is extremely painful, feels blocked and exudes a scanty
serosanguinous discharge.
The pinna and tragus are tender on palpation.
Otoscopic examination usually establishes the diagnosis
If the oedema and secondary Cellulitis spreads to the post auricular
crease, the condition may be mistaken for acute mastoiditis
Outcomes
If untreated, the infection usually progresses to a localized abscess which
then discharges into the external ear canal. Providing there is adequate
drainage the infection will resolve spontaneously
The infection can also spread towards the deeper tissues, where it may
cause a diffuse soft tissue infection spreading to the pinna, post-auricular
skin and parotid gland.
Repeated infection can cause permanent scarring and fibrosis of the
external canal with subsequent meatal stenosis.
Management options
Treatment choices include:
Oral or systemic antistaphylococcal antibiotics (penicillinase-resistant
penicillin, macrolide, cephalosporin, clindamycin or quinolone)
Topical treatment (antibiotics, astringents, hygroscopic, dehydrating
agents);
Incision and drainage.
Glycerol and ichthammol solution has a specific antistaphylococcal
action and is hygroscopic
For patients suffering generalized recurrent furunculosis who are carriers
of pathogenic strains of S. aureus : include:
o Eradication therapy with Nasal Mupirocin
o Eradication therapy with Oral Flucloxacillin for 14 days.
o Bacterial interference therapy: deliberately implanting a
nonpathogenic strain of S. Aureus (strain 502A is the most
popular) to recolonize the nares and skin.
o It has been reported that correction of specific biochemical
abnormalities (e.g. hypoferraemia, low serum zinc) may lead to a
marked reduction in the frequency of infections.
COMMON COLD
Definition
A cold is a common infection of upper respiratory tract. that can be
caused by over 200 different viruses
The common cold is one of the most common illnesses.
cold is a mild viral infection of the nose, throat, sinuses and upper
airways.
It can cause a blocked nose followed by a runny nose, sneezing, a sore
throat and a cough.
Epidemiology
There are no major gender or ethnicity differences in incidence.
Most infections occur in the winter period.
A 2000 US study found that 23.6% of adults had experienced a cold in 4
weeks.
Children get 6 to 8 colds per year. Adults get 4 to 6 colds per year.
Sourecs of common cold
The list of types of Common cold mentioned in various sources includes:
o Rhinovirus-related colds - 30-35% of colds
o Coronavirus-related colds
o Adenovirus-related colds
o Echovirus-related colds
o Paramyxovirus-related colds –
o including several parainfluenza viruses
o Enterovirus-related colds
How does a cold spread
A cold can be spread through:
o Direct contact – sneeze or cough, tiny droplets of fluid containing
the cold virus are launched into the air and can be breathed in by
others.
o Indirect contact – sneeze onto a door handle and someone else
touches the handle a few minutes later, they may catch the cold
virus if they can touch their mouth or nose.
Pathophysiology
The mechanism of this immune response is virus specific.
For example, the rhinovirus is typically acquired by direct contact it
binds to human ICAM-1 receptors(Inter-Cellular Adhesion Molecule 2)
This receptors present on respiratory epithelial cells.
As the virus replicates and spreads, infected cells release distress signals
known as chemokines and cytokines(which in turn activate inflammatory
mediators).
These inflammatory mediators then produce the symptoms.
Signs and symptoms
Dry or sore throat.
Runny nose
Sneezing
Headache
Earaches, also brought on by the congestion (especially in children).
Slight fever and chills
Coughing
Feeling tired.
Complications
Colds may aggravate the symptoms of other conditions, such as
asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
Cold can also lead to
o acute bacterial bronchitis.
o strep throat.
o pneumonia.
o ear infections.
Diagnosis
Symptoms and a physical examination are all the doctor needs to
diagnose the common cold.
Usually, no blood tests or X-ray are necessary.
During the physical examination, the doctor will pay careful attention to
the head, neck, and chest.
Examine the eyes, ears, throat, and chest to help determine if a bacterial
source is causing the illness.
Treatment
Over-the-counter cold and cough medicines may help ease symptoms in
adults and older children.
Nasal decongestents
o Oxymetazoline
o Phenylephrin
o Analgesics
o Acetaminophen
o Ibuprofen
o Take plenty of fluids
RHINITIS
Definition
Rhinitis is defined as inflammation of nasal mucosal lining characterized
by one Or more of the following symptoms:
o Nasal congestion
o Rhinorrhoea
o Sneezing
o Itching
Rhinosinusitis
It anatomically the lining mucosa is contiguous With that of paranasal
sinuses.
It goes without Saying that if one is involved the other is also Involved.
Hence instead of using the term Rhinitis it would be apt to use the term “
Rhinosinusitis”.
Symptom complex of rhinosinusitis include
Nasal congestion
Rhinorrhoea
Sneezing
Itching
Hyposmia
Anosmia
Facial pain
Head ache
Classification
Allergic rhinitis
Very common
Incidence seems to be increasing
Frequently accompanied by asthma
Other co existing conditions include
o conjunctivitis Sinusitis and otitis media.
Symptoms
Repeated attacks of sneezing
Itiching in the nose
Rhinorrhoea
Itching of eyes
Headache due to congestion of paranasal sinuses
These symptoms tend to reduce with age
Allergic rhinitis classification
Intermittent (Seasonal)
Persistent (Perennial)
Mild
Moderate - severe
Seasonal rhinitis
Also known as intermittent rhinitis
It usually lasts less than 4 days a week
The whole disorder lasts for about a month
Usually caused due to exposure to seasonal Allergens like pollen
Common during spring when flowers bloom
Perennial rhinitis
Also known as persistent rhinitis
Symptoms last for more than 4 days a week
Whole disorder lasts for more than a month
This is due to continuous exposure to allergen eg. House dust mite
Mild allergic rhinitis
Allergic rhinitis is considered to be mild if the symptoms does'nt cause:
o Sleep disturbance
o Impairment of daily activity
o Impairment of work
o Troublesome symptoms
Moderate allergic rhinitis
This includes one or more of the following:
o Sleep disturbance
o Impairment of daily activity
o Impairment of work
o Troublesome symptoms
Allergic rhinitis pathophysiology
The reaction occurs in 4 phases
o Sensitization
o Subsequent reaction to allergen – early phase
o Late phase reaction
o Systemic activation
Sensitization
Grass pollen / House dust mite / cat dander Harmless in non atopics In
atopics gets attached to antigen presenting cells Present in the nasal
mucosa
These activated APC's stimulate hypersensitivity Mast cells are
responsible for sensitization
Early phase of allergic rhinitis
Histamine is responsible
Rhinitis Sneezing Prurutis Mast cell degranulation plays a role
Prostaglandin D2 / cytokines may play a role
Late phase response
This phase is inflammatory in nature Ingress of eosinophils / basophils /
mast cells / T lymphocytes / neutrophils / macrophages Eosinophils
mature and reside in the nasal mucosa For more than a week Symptoms –
Nasal block / hyper reactivity
Occupational rhinitis
Can also be considered as one form of allergic Rhinitis
Allergy could be due to exposure to mice / guinea Pig hair in lab
Exposure to platinum salts could sensitize a patient
Occupational rhinitis Risk factors
Smoking
Intensity / duration of exposure
Atopy
Investigations
Skin prick tests
Radiology
Nasal swab
Nasal challenge
Nasal biopsy for assessing mucociliary function
Rhinomanometry
Tests for olfaction
Management
Antibiotics
Antihistamine
Avoid the exposure to dust
EPISTAXIS
Definition
Bleeding from inside the nose is called epistaxis.
Seen in all age groups.
Presents as an emergency.
Epistaxis is a sign and not a disease
Blood supply of nose
Nose is richly supplied by both the external and internal carotid systems,
both on the septum and the lateral walls.
Nasal septum :Internal carotid system
o Anterior ethmoidal artery Branches of ophthalmic
o Posterior ethmoidal artery
Causes of epistaxis
Divided into :
A) Local, in the nose or nasopharynx.
B) General
C) Idiopathic
Local causes in nose
Trauma
InfectionsAcute : viral rhinitis, nasal diphtheria, acute [Link] :
All crust-forming disease, e.g. atrophic rhinitis, rhinitissicca.
Foreign bodies.
Non-living: Any neglected foreign body, [Link]: Maggots
leeches.
Neoplasms of nose and paranasal [Link]: Haemangioma,
[Link]: Carcinoma or sarcoma
Atmospheric changes. High altitudes, sudden decompression.
Deviated nasal septum.
Nasopharynx
Adenoiditis
Juvenile angiofibroma
Malignant tumours
General causes
Cardiovascular system. Hypertension, arteriosclerosis.
Disorders of blood and blood vessels.
Liver disease, Hepatic cirrhosis
Kidney disease. Chronic nephritis.
Drugs. Excessive use of salicylates and other analgesics anticoagulant
therapy
Mediastinal compression. Tumours of mediastinum (raised venous
pressure in the nose).
Acute general infection.
Vicarious menstruation (epistaxis occurring at the time of menstruation)
Idiopathic
Many times the cause of epistaxis is not clear.
Sites of epistaxis
Little’s area. In 90% cases.
Above the level of middle turbinate.
Below the level of middle turbinate.
Posterior part of nasal cavity.
Diffuse. Both from septum and lateral nasal wall
Nasopharynx.
Classification of epistaxis
Anterior epistaxis
Posterior epistaxis .
Incidence
Mostly occurs in children
After 40 years of age or young adultsCause
Mostly trauma Spontaneous; often due to hypertension or anteriosclerosis
Bleeding Usually mild, can be easily Bleeding is severe controlled by
local pressure requires hospitalisation; or anterior pack postnasal pack
often required
Management
In any case of epistaxis, it is important to know
o Mode of onset
o Duration and frequency of bleeding
o Amount of blood loss.
o Side of nose from where bleeding is occuring.
o Whether bleeding is of anterior or posterior type.
o Any known bleeding tendency in the patient or family.
o History of known medical ailment (hypertension, leukaemias,
mitral valve disease, cirrhosis, nephritis).8) History of drug intake
(analgesics, anticoagulant, etc.)
First aid
Pinching the nose with thumb and index finger for about 5 minutes.
This compresses the vessels of the Little’s area.
In Trotter’s method patient is made to sit, leaning a little forward over a
basin to spit any blood, and breathe quietly from the mouth.
Cold compresses to the nose to cause reflex
[Link]
In anterior epistaxis when bleeding point has been located.
The area is first anaesthetised and the bleeding point cauterised with a
bead of silver nitrate or coagulated with electrocautery.
Anterior nasal packing
If bleeding is profuse and/or the site of bleeding is difficult to localise,
anterior packing should be done.
Ribbon gauze soaked with liquid paraffin
About 1 metre gauze (2.5 cm wide in adults and 12 mm in children) is
required for each nasal cavity.
First, few centimetres of gauze are folded upon itself and inserted along
the floor, and then the whole nasal cavity is packed tightly by layering the
gauze from floor to the root and layering the gauze from floor to the roof
and from before backwards
One or both cavities may need to be packed
Can be removed after 24 hours if bleeding has stopped
If it has to be kept for 2 to 3 days; systemic antibiotics should be given to
prevent sinus infection and toxic shock syndrome.
Posterior nasal packing
For patients bleeding posteriorly into the throat.
A postnasal pack is prepared by tying three silk ties to a piece of gauze
rolled into the shape of a cone.
Patients requiring postnasal pack should always be hospitalised.
Folley’s catheter can also be used.
Nasal balloons are also [Link] cautery
For posterior bleeding point after locating with endoxcope.
Elevation of mucoperichondrial flap and SMR operation
In case of persistent or recurrent bleeds from the septum, elevation of
mucoperichondrial flap and then repositioning it helps to cause fibrosis
and constrict blood vessels.
SMR operation remove any septal spur.
Ligation of vessels
External carotid
o Ligation of external carotid artery above the origin of superior
thyroid artery
o Embolisation or lgation of more peripheral branches.
Maxillary artery
o Ligation in uncontrollable posterior epistaxis.
o Endoscopic ligation of the maxillary artery can also be done
through nose.
Ethmoidal arteries
o In anterosuperior bleeding above the middle turbinate.
o The vessels are exposed in the medial wall of the orbit by an
external ethmoid incision.
Sphenopalatine artery ligation
General Measures in Epistaxis
Make the patient up with a back rest and record any blood loss through
spitting or vomiting.
Reassure the patient. Mild sedation.
Keep check on pulse, BP and respiration.
Maintain haemodynamics: Blood transfusion.
Antibiotics to prevent sinusitis, if pack is be kept beyond 24 hours.
Intermittent oxygen patients with bilateral packs.
Investigate and treat the patient for any underlying local or general cause.
PHARYNGITIS
Definition
Inflammation of the pharynx is called pharyngitis.
Types
Acute pharyngitis
Chronic pharyngitis
Acute pharyngitis
very common condition encountered in medicine
One of the poorly understood condition
Many have no scientific basis
Several questions remain unanswered
Do viral infections predispose to bacterialinfection
Do viral infections involve pharyngeal lymphoidtissue without involving
tonsils?
Etiology
Viral (42%)
o Adenovirus (most common 31%)
o Epstein –Barr virus(6%)
o Influenza virus(5%)
Bacterial –Mixed infection common(48%)
o beta-hemolytic streptococci(38%)
o H. influenza -staphylococcus aureus
o diphtheria -gonococcus -anaerobes remain uncertain.
Fungal –Candida albicans.
clinical features
Mild infection - discomfort ,malaise ,low grade fever ,congested ,no
lymphadenopathy
Moderate - pain, dysphagia, headache, high fever. -congested,
oedematous, exudates, enlarged tonsils, lymphoid follicles of posterior
pharyngeal wall, lymph nodes palpable and tender.
viral infection mild-associated with rhinorrhoea.
Voice change-severe bacterial infection.
Gonococcal pharyngitis-mild or even symptomless.
Diagnosis
History & physical examination
culture & sensitivity-may be helpful.
Treatment
general measures
Bed rest
Fluids
Warm saline gargle
Analgesics
Specific-penicillin g-oral or injection.
If sensitive- macrolides.
Chronic Pharyngitis
Characterized by hypertrophy of mucosal seromucinous glands, sub
epithelial lymphoid tissue, even muscular coat.
Types
Catarrhal (mucosal)
Hypertrophic
Etiology
Persistent infections
chronic rhinosinusitis with post nasal drip
chronic tonsillitis, dental sepsis
Mouth breathing-nasal polyp,
DNS with Hits, allergic/vasomotor rhinitis, nasopharyngeal adenoids,
tumours. -with mouth breathing air is not filtered, humidified and
temperature conditioned
Chronic irritants-smoking, tobacco chewing, alcohol, highly spicy food
Environmental-smoke, dust, chemicals, occupational fumes.
Faulty voice production- misuse/over use
Symptoms
Discomfort
pain-more during morning
Foreign body sensation-constant desire to swallow or clear throat.
Voice tiredness
cough
signs
Catarrhal- congestion
Vascular engogement, increased secretions
Hypertrophic-pharyngeal wall thick, edematous, congested mucosa and
dilated vessels
Posterior pharyngeal wall studded with reddish nodules-(granular
pharyngitis) due to sub epithelial lymphoid follicle hypertrophy
Uvula congested and elongated.
Treatment
Etiological factor sought and eradicated
o Voice rest
o speech therapy
o Warm saline gargle
o Severe granular type-chemical or diathermy cautery done.
TONSILLITIS
Definition
Inflammation or infection of the tonsils is medically termed as Tonsillitis
Tonsils are protective (lymph) glands that are situated on both sides in the
throat.
The tonsils constitute an important part of the body's immune system and
are vital defense organs.
They protect the body from bacteria and viruses by fighting these as soon
as they enter the body (via the oral / nasal cavity).
Pathology
When the tonsils get inflamed, they become red, swollen and may
develop pus pockets that start exuding a discharge.
In cases with recurrent infections, the tonsils may become so swollen
over a period of time so as to almost touch each other
Tonsillitis is very common amongst children
No particular gender predilection is seen in cases of tonsillitis.
Causes
Bacterial and viral infections can cause tonsillitis through droplet
infection
A common cause is Streptococcus bacteria
Other common causes include
o Adenoviruses
o Influenza virus
o Epstein-Barr virus
o Parainfluenza viruses
o Enteroviruses
o Herpes simplex virus
Triggering factors
Foods with artificial colors and preservatives
Peanuts.
Cold foods, cold drinks, Ice creams.
Changes of weather
Extremely cold climate
Damp weather
Exposure to a lot of pollution.
Sour fruits, lemon, pineapple, grapes, oranges.
Signs
Red and swollen tonsils
White spots (specks or patches) on the tonsils
Enlarged lymph nodes in neck region
Bad and foul breath
Cough
Running Nose
Symptoms
Soreness of throat
Difficulty in swallowing or painful swallowing of food and drinks
Pain / discomfort while swallowing saliva
Change of voice
Pain in the ears (due to common nerve supply of the back of the throat
and ears)
Headache
Malaise, tiredness
Difficulty in taking feeds in babies - this may be the sole indicator in
some cases of tonsillitis in infants
Catarrhal tonsillitis
When tonsils are inflamed as part of the generalised infection of the
oropharyngeal mucosa it is called catarrhal tonsillitis.
Membranous tonsillitis
Some times exudation from crypts may coalesce to form a membrane
over the surface of tonsil, giving rise to clinical picture of membranous
tonsillitis.
Parenchymatous tonsillitis
When the whole tonsil is uniformly congested and swollen it is called
acute parenchymatous tonsillitis
Diagnosis
Examination of the throat in tonsillitis
o Redness and swelling of the tonsils
o Pus pockets on the tonsils
o Discharge from the tonsils
o In case of peritonsillar abscess, there may be a shift of the involved
tonsil towards the center of the throat. The uvula may be shifted
towards the opposite side (away from the affected tonsil).
Throat swab - This is used to get a sample of the secretion from the back
of the throat.
Monospot test - A blood test can detect certain antibodies, which can
help confirm that a person’s symptoms are due to mononucleosis.
Epstein-Barr virus antibodies - If a monospot test is negative, antibodies
in the blood against EBV might help diagnose mononucleosis.
Blood tests - This primarily includes a complete blood count (CBC)
which is done to confirm the presence of infection.
Complications
Local: Severe swelling with spread of infection and inflammation to the
hypopharynx and larynx may occasionally produce increasing respiratory
obstruction, although it is very rare in uncomplicated acute tonsillitis.
Peritonsillar abscess is one of the complications of acute tonsillitis and its
development means that infection has spread outside tonsillar capsule.
Spread of infection from tonsil or more usually from a peritonsillar
abscess through the superior constrictor muscle of the pharynx first
results in cellulitis of the neck and later in parapharyngeal space abscess.
Allopathic treatment
Acetaminophen & Ibuprufen are given for relieving the symptoms.
Antibiotics are prescribed once bacterial infection is confirmed.
Tonsillectomy
For those children's who do not repond to antibiotics
Quinsy - It is usually treated by draining the abscess and antibiotics.
Sometimes removing the tonsils is needed to treat quinsy.
Prevention
Avoid close contact with others who are sick.
Keep children away from kids who are known to have tonsillitis or a sore
throat.
Remind kids about the importance of proper hand-washing, especially
when around people who appear to be sick.
Wash and disinfect surfaces and toys.
Teaching kids to cover their mouths when coughing or sneezing,
preferably using a tissue so that germs do not get on their hands. And
show them how to use tissues to wipe their noses.
Carry disposable wipes and a hand sanitizer to clean hands
PERITONSILLAR ABCESS
Definition
Peritonsillar abscess (PTA), also known as a quinsy, is pus due to
an infection behind the tonsil.
Symptoms
Fever
Throat pain
trouble opening the mouth
Change to the voice.
Pain is usually worse on one side
Treatment
Removing the pus
antibiotics
Sufficient fluids
pain medication
Steroids may also be useful
Admission to hospital is generally not needed
Tonsillectomy
Complication
Airway obstruction
Aspiration