Easy Peasy Eardrums
Easy Peasy Eardrums
Easy Peasy Eardrums
Tip:
If you can make out the malleus, then you can figure out
whether something is worth worrying over by noting its
relation to it. It’s simple really. More later….
The Normal Eardrum
There is another EASIER way you can figure out whether something is in the anterior or posterior segment.
When you’re looking down an earhole, just figure out whether the lesion is at the face end of the patient or not. If
it is, it is anterior… easy peasy lemon squeezy!
The clever ones amongst you will have figured out that the picture above is in fact the right ear drum.
What are you looking at?
• Shape of the eardrum – bulging or retracted
• Colour of the eardrum – red (infection), yellow (glue ear),
brown (blood), presence of blood vessels (injected?)
• Light reflex present or not? (usually absent in bulging EDs)
• Things that should not be there
1. Perforations
2. Bubbles (glue ear, resolving infection)
3. White patches (tympanosclerosis or cholesteatoma)
4. Granulations
5. Red lesion at tip of malleus (glomus tumour)
6. Grommets/FBs
Bubbles
Other abnormalities –
In summary, what is a non red bulging eardrum with fluid? presence of fluid levels and
bubbles
Serous otitis media with retraction
Otitis media+effusion-Glue ear
Features
• Dull retracted TM
• May show air-fluid level
• Conductive hearing loss(whisper test, Rinne/weber tests)
Notes
• Common in children; often after AOM and can persist for
weeks
• Reduced hearing noticed by parents/teacher
• Unsteadiness- child falling over
• 80% clear at 8 weeks
Eustachian Tube Dysfunction
Okay, in all honesty, I didn’t expect
you to get the diagnosis here. In
fact, the patient would come in
complaining of his ears popping and
sometimes pain and together with
this picture, you should get the
diagnosis. But on the picture alone
= diagnosis is difficult.
Notes
• “My ears have been popping for two weeks and occasionally
hurt.”
• Treatment includes pinching your nose and blowing - this
forces air up the tube and pops the ear drum back into place.
Eustachian Tube dysfunction
• Chronic blockage of the Eustachian tube is called Eustachian tube dysfunction. The
eustachian tube becomes congested and swollen so that it may temporarily close;
this prevents air flow behind the ear drum and causes ear pressure, pain or
popping just as you experience with altitude change when traveling on an airplane
or an elevator.
• This can occur when the lining of the nose becomes irritated and inflamed,
narrowing the Eustachian tube opening or its passageway.
In this pic:
Notes
• Deposition of calcium into the drum itself in response to
trauma or infection
• This is not normally of any consequence unless it is severe,
which can lead to a mild conductive hearing loss.
Perforation – the next set of slides are
dead important. So pay attention.
Safe vs Unsafe Perforations
• You need to be able to distinguish between safe and unsafe
perorations.
SAFE PERFORATIONS
• A safe perforation is exactly what it sounds like: a hole in the
tympanic membrane.
• The main risk of safe perforations are that they may allow
infection to enter the middle ear
• But there are rarely more serious sequelae.
Safe vs Unsafe Perforations
UNSAFE PERFORATIONS
• Unsafe perforations are not in fact holes in the drum, they
represent a retraction of the tympanic membrane.
• Essentially a part of the drum becomes sucked inwards and
may gradually enlarge.
• When the retraction becomes extensive, keratinous debris
builds up in the retraction and may become infected. This is
essentially how acquired cholesteatoma develops.
• Cholesteatoma is a dangerous lesion because it is capable of
eroding through bone and may cause serious and even life
threatening complications - hence the use of the term unsafe.
More on UNSAFE
• Inspect the attic region (the small area of drum between
lateral process of the malleus and the roof of the ext aud
canal immediately above it)
1. Any defect or apparent perforation in the attic must be
considered unsafe (?cholesteatoma)
2. A posterior perforation where the posterior margin of the
drum is also unsafe. This are often linear rather than oval.
3. Any perforation involving the drum margin is also unsafe
A note: Safe and Unsafe Discharge
UNSAFE SAFE
Source Cholesteatoma Mucosa
Odour Foul Inoffensive
Amount Usually scant, never Can be profuse
profuse
Nature Purulent Mucopurulent
If you can’t tell whether it is anterior, posterior, inferior or in the attic, go back to slide 13
Safe inferior perforation
Safe Inferior
perforation. This is
more likely to be as a
result of chronic middle
ear infection.
Unsafe posterior perforation
Is this safe or unsafe?
You decide?
Posterior perforation.
Although posterior
perforations may
represent more serious
disease such as
cholesteatoma, this is
well described and dry. It
is possible to make out
the posterior margin of
this defect. Traumatic
perforations (e.g
barotrauma) are often
posterior and linear,
like a tear rather than a
round hole.
Unsafe because it is a
perforation involving the drum
margin (the yellowy white
flakes indicating a
cholesteatoma also gives it
away!).
‘Monolayer’ (healed perforation)
How To Spot The Serious Eardrum
Features
• Recurrent ear discharge
• Perforation of the TM – central
• Presence of cholesteatoma
• Marginal, Attic perforation
• Offensive discharge, bleeding, granulations
Notes
• May have hearing loss
Now for some bits and bobs
to finish off
Granulations