6. Suppurative otitis media (acute, chronic)
- Acute (suppurative) otitis media
- Epidemiology
- Infants
- Small children
- 80% by 3 years of age
- Etiology
- Bacterial superinfection (on viral URTI) which ascends through eustachian tube
- S. pneumoniae
- H. influenzae
- Risk factors
- Previous AOM
- Chronic otitis media
- Parental smoking
- Protective factors
- Prolonged breastfeeding
- Pneumococcal vaccine
- Clinical features
- Ear pain
- Infants repeatedly touch the ear
- Fever
- Discharge from ear
- Only if there is spontaneous tympanic perforation
- Conductive hearing loss
- Ear pain
- Diagnosis
- Early: Retracted, hypomobile tympanic membrane
- Then: Bulging tympanic membrane
- Due to accumulation of pus
- Loss of light reflex
- Treatment
- NSAIDs
- Not decongestants! – prolong course
- Antibiotics
- Only in < 2 years, or > 2 years if bilateral, no resolution in 2 days
- Amoxicillin
- Clavulanic acid added if treatment failure
- Complications
- Intratemporal complications
- Mastoiditis
- Children
- Infection spread to mastoid -> collection of pus -> destruction of air cells -> empyema
- Antibiotics
- Always!
- Vancomycin
- Mastoidectomy in severe cases
- Peripheral facial nerve palsy
- Labyrinthitis
- Inflammation of inner ear
- Vertigo
- Nystagmus
- Sensorineural hearing loss
- Mastoiditis
- Intracranial complications
- Meningitis
- Otogenic abscess
- Epidural, subdural or cerebral
- Headache
- Sinus thrombosis
- Extracranial complications
- Bezold abscess
- Deep to sternocleidomastoid, pus from mastoiditis erodes through the mastoid part of the temporal bone
- Bezold abscess
- Intratemporal complications
- Epidemiology
- Chronic suppurative otitis media
- Persistent drainage from middle ear through perforated tympanic membrane lasting > 6 weeks
- Perforated tympanic membrane usually heals within weeks
- No healing -> sign of chronic inflammation
- Older children
- Bacteria enter through perforated TM
- Clinical features
- 3 yes 1 no
- Yes: Perforation of TM
- Yes: Ear discharge
- Yes: Conductive hearing loss
- No: No pain
- Two types
- Mesotympanic
- Central perforation
- Treatment: tympanoplasty
- With cholesteatoma
- Cholesteatoma: keratinizing squamous epithelium found in bony spaces, and the bone is destroyed by inflammatory osteoclastic process
- In TM, auditory canal or mastoid
- Can become infected
- Marginal perforation
- Brown irregular mass
- Imaging to assess bone destruction
- Treatment: surgery
- Cholesteatoma: keratinizing squamous epithelium found in bony spaces, and the bone is destroyed by inflammatory osteoclastic process
- Mesotympanic
- Persistent drainage from middle ear through perforated tympanic membrane lasting > 6 weeks