Otitis media natural history, complications and prognosis: Difference between revisions
Hardik Patel (talk | contribs) Created page with "__NOTOC__ {{Otitis media}} {{CMG}} Please help WikiDoc by adding more content here. It's easy! Click here to learn about editing. ==Natural Hi..." |
Hardik Patel (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
At an anatomic level, the typical progression of acute otitis media occurs as follows. The tissues surrounding the [[Eustachian tube]] swell due to an upper respiratory infection, allergies, or dysfunction of the tubes. The Eustachian tube remains blocked most of the time. The air present in the middle ear is slowly absorbed into the surrounding tissues. A strong negative pressure creates a vacuum in the middle ear, and eventually the vacuum reaches a point where fluid from the surrounding tissues accumulates in the middle ear. This is seen as a progression from a Type A [[tympanogram]] to a Type C to a Type B tympanogram. The fluid may become infected. It has been found that dormant bacteria behind the tympanum (eardrum) multiply when the conditions are ideal, infecting the middle ear fluid. | At an anatomic level, the typical progression of acute otitis media occurs as follows. The tissues surrounding the [[Eustachian tube]] swell due to an upper respiratory infection, allergies, or dysfunction of the tubes. The Eustachian tube remains blocked most of the time. The air present in the middle ear is slowly absorbed into the surrounding tissues. A strong negative pressure creates a vacuum in the middle ear, and eventually the vacuum reaches a point where fluid from the surrounding tissues accumulates in the middle ear. This is seen as a progression from a Type A [[tympanogram]] to a Type C to a Type B tympanogram. The fluid may become infected. It has been found that dormant bacteria behind the tympanum (eardrum) multiply when the conditions are ideal, infecting the middle ear fluid. | ||
==Complications== | |||
Instead of the infection and eardrum perforation resolving, however, drainage from the middle ear can become a chronic condition. As long as there is active middle ear infection, the eardrum will not heal. The [[World Health Organization]] defines chronic suppurative otitis media (CSOM) as "a stage of ear disease in which there is chronic infection of the middle ear cleft, a non-intact tympanic membrane (i.e. perforated eardrum) and discharge (otorrhoea), for at least the preceding two weeks" (WHO 1998). (Notice WHO's use of the term ''[[serous]]'' to denote a bacterial process, whereas the same term is generally used by ear physicians in the United States to denote simple fluid collection within the middle ear behind an intact eardrum. ''Chronic otitis media'' is the term used by most ear physicians worldwide to describe a chronically infected middle ear with eardrum perforation.) | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 14:18, 6 December 2012
Otitis media Microchapters |
Diagnosis |
---|
Treatment |
Case Studies |
Otitis media natural history, complications and prognosis On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Otitis media natural history, complications and prognosis |
FDA onOtitis media natural history, complications and prognosis |
CDC on Otitis media natural history, complications and prognosis |
media natural history, complications and prognosis in the news |
on Otitis media natural history, complications and prognosis |
Risk calculators and risk factors for Otitis media natural history, complications and prognosis |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Please help WikiDoc by adding more content here. It's easy! Click here to learn about editing.
Natural History
Typically, acute otitis media follows a cold, after a few days of a stuffy nose the ear becomes involved and can cause severe pain. The pain will usually settle within a day or two, but can last over a week. Sometimes the ear drum ruptures, discharging pus from the ear, but the ruptured drum will usually heal rapidly.
At an anatomic level, the typical progression of acute otitis media occurs as follows. The tissues surrounding the Eustachian tube swell due to an upper respiratory infection, allergies, or dysfunction of the tubes. The Eustachian tube remains blocked most of the time. The air present in the middle ear is slowly absorbed into the surrounding tissues. A strong negative pressure creates a vacuum in the middle ear, and eventually the vacuum reaches a point where fluid from the surrounding tissues accumulates in the middle ear. This is seen as a progression from a Type A tympanogram to a Type C to a Type B tympanogram. The fluid may become infected. It has been found that dormant bacteria behind the tympanum (eardrum) multiply when the conditions are ideal, infecting the middle ear fluid.
Complications
Instead of the infection and eardrum perforation resolving, however, drainage from the middle ear can become a chronic condition. As long as there is active middle ear infection, the eardrum will not heal. The World Health Organization defines chronic suppurative otitis media (CSOM) as "a stage of ear disease in which there is chronic infection of the middle ear cleft, a non-intact tympanic membrane (i.e. perforated eardrum) and discharge (otorrhoea), for at least the preceding two weeks" (WHO 1998). (Notice WHO's use of the term serous to denote a bacterial process, whereas the same term is generally used by ear physicians in the United States to denote simple fluid collection within the middle ear behind an intact eardrum. Chronic otitis media is the term used by most ear physicians worldwide to describe a chronically infected middle ear with eardrum perforation.)