Otitis Externa Flashcards

1
Q

What 3 tissues is the auricle (pinna) earlobe made of?

A
  1. cartilage
  2. perichondrium
  3. thin vascularized skin
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2
Q

What are the two sections is the external auditory meatus/ear?

A
  1. outer: hair, sebaceous and ceruminous glands

2. inner: rigid bone

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3
Q

What is the Isthmus?

A

narrowing of the canal

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4
Q

What are 3 characteristics of cerumen?

A
  1. acidic pH: protects against infection
  2. hydrophobic: protects skin of external ear canal from water damage
  3. self-cleaning: epidermal cells migrate to outside by jaw movement
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5
Q

What are signs of impacted cerumen?

A
fullness, 
hearing loss,
tinnitus
itchiness 
NO PAIN
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6
Q

Risk factors for impacted cerumen?

A
anatomy of the ear
overproduction of cerumen 
migration failure 
foreign objects in the ear 
prior history of impaction 
older age
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7
Q

How to treat impacted cerumen?

A

only for symptomatic pts

Cerumenolytics

  • oil based wax softeners (olive oil, light mineral oil, almond hair) used 4days per week for 2-3 weeks
  • water based wax softeners (water, saline, hydrogen peroxide)

Professional removal

  • irrigation
  • manual removal
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8
Q

When to refer patient when they have impacted cerumen?

A

rash in-ear or ear infection
history of ear surgery or tubes in the ear
foreign object in the ear

the suspected burst eardrum
(bleeding/discharge, dizziness, pain, ringing sound, hearing loss)

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9
Q

What is otitis externa known as?

A

“Swimmers ear”

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10
Q

inflammation of the external ear canal

A

otitis externa

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11
Q

What is considered acute OE

what is considered chronic OE

A

acute < 3 weeks

chronic > 3 weeks

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12
Q

What bacteria causes acute OE

A

Pseudomonas
S. aureus
klebsiella, proteus

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13
Q

what organism causes chronic chronic OE?

A

caused by fungi or allergies
otomycosis
aspergillus
candida albicans

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14
Q

List some risk factors for otitis externa

A
long time in the water  and pH goes up 
high temperature 
no ear wax
trauma
using foreign objects 
dermatology conditions 
age (7-12)
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15
Q

Symptoms of otitis externa

A
pain *within 48 hours) 
itching 
ear fullness
headache 
discharge 
swollen ear canal 
loss of hearing
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16
Q

When diagnosing otitis externa, what four things can you rule out?

A

acute otitis media
malignant otitis externa
dermatological conditions of the ear
sensitization from otic medications

17
Q

When to refer to physician for otitis externa?

A

fever, malaise,
bleeding/discharge
progressing ear pain, stabbing pain, hearing loss

18
Q

Goals of therapy

A

eliminate pathogen organisms
control/relieve pain and otorrhea
restore ear canal to normal health, normal pH and adequate cerumen

19
Q

Non pharm treatment options for patient with otitis externa

A

keep the ear dry and avoid water in the ear for 7-10 days
clean ear canal
analgesic treatment

20
Q

Pharmacolgical treatment for otitis externa

A
  1. acidifying agents
  2. topical antibiotics

Systemic therapy only for severe cases

21
Q

What is the function of acidifying agents in otitis externa?

A

produce low pH
use vinegar: water
dilute it 50% with water and can be used as prophylaxis

22
Q

List some antibacterial OTC agents

A

polysporin

polysporin + pain relief

23
Q

Antibacterial agents Rx

A

fluoroquinolones
aminoglycosides
combinations (ciprodex)

24
Q

List 5 drug families that are known to cause ototoxicity

A
aminoglycosides 
other antibiotics (erythromycin, tetracycline)

Usually reversible but cause ototoxicty
chemotherapeutic agents
salicylates
antimalarials

25
Q

Is fungus more common in acute OE or chronic OE ?

A

chronic OE

26
Q

Signs and symptoms for fungal otitis externa?

A

itching, slight pain
black fine exudate
white brown film

27
Q

Treatment for fungal otitis externa

A

ear cleaning + topical therapy
acetic acid
antifungal

28
Q

Signs of otitis externa caused by herpes simplex, zoster or measles

A

pain, blister swelling

29
Q

an infection in the ear that spreads to the cartilage and temporal bone

A

otitis externa - malignant

30
Q

what can otitis externa malignant lead to?

a) osteoporosis
b) osteoarthritis
c) osteomyelitis
d) osteoblast

A

c) osteomyelitis

31
Q

How long should otitis externa be monitored?

A

improvement within 24 hours

monitor for 48-72 hours for improvement

32
Q

how long is duration of therapy with topical therapy?

A

7-10 days

33
Q

how is the systemic delivery of drugs to the inner ear limited?

A

blood labyrinth barrier

high systemic concentrations needed

34
Q

What are the two types of otic drug delivery?

A

solution/suspensions

ointments

35
Q

what two ingredients are used for sterility in otic meds

A

benzalkonium chloride

EDTA

36
Q

What chemical is used for isotonicity in otic drug delivery

A

Sodium chloride

37
Q

What type of ingredient is used for viscosity in otic meds

A

increases contact time with ear canal
methylcellulose, hydroxycellulose
polyvinyl alcohol