Otology Flashcards

1
Q

Hearing loss differentials-

A
Impacted ear wax
Cholesteatoma
Malignancy
Presbycusis 
Congenital hearing loss
Foreign body
AOM
OE
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2
Q

Red flags of ear

A

Acute sensorineural hearing loss
Acute discharge
Redness/swelling of mastoid

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3
Q

Otitis externa

A

Inflammation of the external canal commonly due to infection (staph.a) but also non infectious (dermatitis)

Localised to a hair follicle or diffuse.
Malignant otitis externa (benign) but can be fatal as can erode into the bone.

Treat with:
Ear drops- ciprofloxacin.
If not settling then oral flucloxacillin, or macrolide if allergy for 5-7days.
Give appropriate analgesia

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4
Q

Noise related hearing loss

A

Sensorineural hearing loss
Associated with TINNITUS
No cure just reduce loud noise exposure.

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5
Q

Ménière’s disease characteristic symptoms-

A

Vertigo (20 mins to 12hrs, need at least 2 sporadic episodes)
Fullness of the ear
Tinnitus
Sensorineural hearing loss (fluctuating)

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6
Q

Ménière’s disease management-

A

ENT referral for confirmation of diagnosis.
Self care, reassurance of vertigo resolving, low salt diet.
Treat vertigo with prochlorperazine buccal/IM 1-2wks.
Reduce attack severity and frequency with betahistine and vestibular exercises. If non resolving then ENT referral.
Vertigo will resolve whilst other symptoms persist.

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7
Q

Presbycusis

A

Progressive bilateral sensorineural hearing loss.

No cure, manage with hearing aids, reassurance

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8
Q

Acute otitis media

A

Complications include hearing loss and recurrent infection.
More serious but rare include mastoiditis, meningitis and facial nerve paralysis.

Preceded by viral URTI or has a bacterial cause; h.influenza, strep.pneumonia

Management includes
Pain and fever relief
5-7 days amoxicillin if severe systemic effects or at high risk of complications
Not responding to Abx, consider tympanocentesis.

Should avoid passive/active smoking to avoid reinfection.

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9
Q

Chronic suppurative otitis media with wet perforation

A

Complication of AOM
Can lead to extra cranial facial paralysis, mastoiditis or intracranial cerebral abscess, meningitis.

Symptoms include ottorrhoea w/o pain/fever, possible hearing loss.

Manage by not taking a swab, not treating in primary care, refer to secondary care for Abx treatment.

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10
Q

Dry tympanic perforation

A

Caused commonly by infection.
Symptoms include otalgia with perforation, otorrhoea and potential hearing loss.

Should resolve within 2 months.
Avoid water in the war and if prior to AOM then prescribe Abx.
If non resolving then potential myringoplasty.

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11
Q

Congenital hearing loss

A

Genetics, Down’s syndrome, Treacher Colins syndrome, trauma during birth, mother infected by syphilis, rubella.

Investigate with:
HRCT
Genetic testing
Audiometry
Neonatal hearing screen
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12
Q

Mastoiditis-

A

Very dangerous can lead to intracranial infection.
Key features include; mastoid tenderness/red/inflamed, bulging/perforated TM, fever, cervical lymphadenopathy at affected side.
Common organism in unnvaccinated children- H.I, vaccinated- Strep.pyogenes/pneumoniae, adults- strep.pn, staph.a.
Complications include conductive or sensorineural HL, facial nerve damage, vertigo, meningitis.

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13
Q

Mastoiditis-
Investigations
Management

A

Investigate bloods, renal, contrast CT, blood cultrues.

IV Abx ceftriaxone.
If penicillin allergic then IV vancomycin.
If progressing then drain surgically by myringotomy+grommet or mastoidectomy.

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14
Q

Cholesteatoma-

A

Foul smelling, persistent discharge with hearing loss. Local invasion can cause facial nerve damage, vertigo, altered taste.
Complication- Erode nearby bone.

Semi urgent ENT referral.
Will investigate with a CT.
Needs to be surgically excised.

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15
Q

Referred ear pain-

Perform otoscopy and cranial nerve examinations.

Otalgia w/o ear pathology- need to rule out H+N malignancy.

A

Trigeminal nerve

- Dental issues
- TMJ disorders
- Neuralgia

Facial nerve
- Bells palsy

Glossopharyngeal nerve

- Pharyngitis/ tonsillitis
- Tumours

Vagus nerve
- Myocardial ischaemia

C2, C3
- Cervical spine arthritis-

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16
Q

Otitis media with effusion-

GLUE EAR

A

Presents with hearing loss and recurrent ear infections.
Retracted TM with altered colour- yellow/blue/amber, opaque.
Resolves spontaneously within 12 wks.
May need grommets.
Other medications i.e. Abx, antihistamines not recommended.

17
Q

Acute sinusitis-

A

<12 weeks but usually 10 days.
Nasal obstruction/nasal discharge, with facial pain worse on leaning forward. If bacterial also get temp and discoloured nasal discharge.
RF- Nasal obstruction (septal deviation/polyps), swmming, diving, infections (strep, H.I, Rhinovirus).
Investigate with anterior rhinoscopy.

18
Q

Acute sinusitis management-

A

Intranasal decongestants
Intranasal corticosteroids
If >10 days and non resolving then give phenoxymethylpenicillin. If systemic effects then co-amoxiclav.
Refer if >3 episodes needing Abx in 1 year, persisting after treatment, atypical bacteria, immunocomp, suspected allergy.

19
Q

Chronic sinusitis-

A

> 12 weeks
Nasal discharge/obstruction with facial pain.
Red flags- unilateral symptoms, epitaxis or >3 months and not resolved with treatment compliance.
Investigate with anterior rhinoscopy.

20
Q

Chronic sinusitis management-

A

Red flags need referring + suspect allergy, child with recurrent pneumonia/OM, reduced QoL.
Intranasal saline irrigation
Avoid allergen, stop smoking, stop diving etc.
Intranasal corticosteroids- fluticasone.

21
Q

Thyroid nodules-

A

Investigate with USS and TFTs.

Manage with removal/follow up, US guided fine needle aspiration to diagnose papillary carcinoma.

22
Q

Acute labyrinthitis-

A

Onset 40-70yrs old.
Symptoms; acute onset vertigo, SN HL, tinnitus, N+V.
Types- Suppurative- bacterial cause which invades surrounding structures therefore severe SN HL and vertigo.
Serous- viral cause localised to the labyrinth therefore less severe SN HL and vertigo.
Investigate with H+E, audiometry, CT, R+W, BM to rule our hypoG.

23
Q

Acute labyrinthitis management-

A

Symptomatic relief, keep hydrated.

Can consider promethazine or cyclazine.

24
Q

Allergic rhinitis (Hayfever)-

A

Investigate with skin prick test, IgE.
Manage with; removal/avoid allergen, nasal decongestants, nasal saline irrigation, antihistamines.
Mild/moderate/intermittent- oral/intranasal AH.
Moderate/severe/persistent- intranasal corticosteroids.
If really severe or reduced QoL then oral prednisolone.

25
Q

Nasal polyps-

A

Benign growth of the paranasal sinus mucosa.
PNS has pseudostratified ciliated epithelia.
Investigate with anterior rhinoscopy, nasal endoscopy, CT, if unilateral then biopsy on CT.

26
Q

Nasal polyps management-

A

Shrink with intranasal corticosteroids, polipectomy, nasal saline irrigation, doxycycline if needed.

27
Q

Cervical lymphadenopathy-

A

Malignancy
If bilateral then consider tonsillitis; sore throat, exudate, swollen tonsils, headache, fever etc.
Treat with penicillin or erythromycin if allergy.
Also check Virchows.

28
Q

BPPV-

A

> 55yrs old
10-20 second recurrent vertigo episodes, gradual onset, associated nausea, caused by change in head movement.
Investigate with symptoms and Dix-Hillpike manouvere.

29
Q

BPPV management-

A

Medication not really useful
Patient should rest during attacks
Patient education and reassurance
Epley manoeuvre.

30
Q

Nasal septal deviation-

A

Obstructive breathing
Dry mucosa therefore increase bleeds
Loud breathing in sleep
Recurring sinus infection

31
Q

Vestibular migraine-

A

Sudden onset headache, phonophobia, visual disturbances , vertigo, hearing loss.
Manage by avoiding triggers i.e. dehydration, keep symptom diary.

32
Q

Vestibulopathy-

A

Dizzy, imbalance, nausea, visual problems.

Treat with vestibular sedatives, vestibular rehab therapy, Epley manoeuvre if BPPV.

33
Q

Stridor-

A

Blockage at the level of supra/infra or glottis, trachea.
Concerning if sound reduces, can reduce air entry and lung work.
Causes in children- croup, acute epiglottitis, inhaled foreign body.

34
Q

Sore throat-

A

Tonsillitis- Headache, abdo pain N+V. Tonsillar swelling, tonsillar exudate, anterior CL.
Pharyngitis- sometimes headache, abdo pain, N+V. Pharyngeal exudate, CL.
Investigate with