Ear Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are the “D’s” of ear disease?

A

Dizziness, discomfort, discharge, deafness, din-din (tinnitus), defective facial movement, destruction by disease

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2
Q

What is the difference between conductive and sensorinueral hearing loss?

A

Conductive is due to pathology of the pinna, external auditory meatus and inner ear (problems conducting sound); sensorineural is due to pathology of the inner ear in either the perception of sound by sensory cells (sensori-) or the transmission of these signals by nerve cells (-neural)

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3
Q

What are the four categories of hearing loss?

A

Conductive, sensorineural, mixed and central

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4
Q

What causes most otalgia?

A

Referred pain

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5
Q

Which nerves are often responsible for referred pain in the ear?

A
V (trigeminal) 
VII (facial)
IX (glossopharnygeal)
X (vagus)
C2 and C3 (great auricular nerve)
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6
Q

When might CSF be discharged from the ear?

A

Head trauma

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7
Q

In the case of acute dizziness, what useful information is provided by asking the patient if they are hard of hearing?

A

If hard of hearing, suggests pathology affected the whole of the inner ear

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8
Q

What is tinnitus?

A

Symptom of ear disease- subjective experience of hearing sound, not related to any external source.

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9
Q

Which condition does “destruction by disease” relate to?

A

Cholesteatoma

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10
Q

What is a cholesteatoma?

A

Sqaumous epithelium trapped in the skull base (in the ear, within the mastoid bone in the middle ear)

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11
Q

What are the two types of cholesteatoma?

A

Congenital and acquired

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12
Q

What can cholesteatoma do if left untreated?

A

Erode the temporal bone

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13
Q

How is acute otitis media often caused?

A

Spread of viral infection from URT- often a secondary bacterial infection

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14
Q

What symptoms are often seen in acute otitis media?

A

Otaliga (earache), otorrhea, headache, concurrent URT symptoms

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15
Q

How does otitis media with effusion differ from acute otitis media?

A

No infection per se; indolent effusion of the middle ear

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16
Q

What is thought to be the cause of otitis media with effusion?

A

Dysfunction of the eustachian tube causing negative pressure in the middle ear, and consequently effusion

17
Q

How does otitis media with effusion often present?

A

Hearing loss (conductive). May delay speech in young children