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Summary Final year MD notes - ENT

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A collection suite of final ENT MD notes to ace your penultimate and final year exams! Look no further and save the stress of accessing multiple resources as this PDF collates and summarises information from several resources including but not limited to: -Talley and O’Connor clinical exami...

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  • December 4, 2023
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  • 2023/2024
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EAR, NOSE AND THROAT
Audiometry
Establishing the diagnosis and extent of hearing loss.




Legend/key
• X – Left-sided air conduction
• ] – Left-sided bone conduction
• O – Right-sided air conduction
• [ – Right-sided bone conduction




Conductive hearing loss Sensorineural hearing loss Mixed hearing loss
Audiometry: • Audiometry both air and bone conduction • Audiometry Both air and bone conduction
• Air conduction readings will be greater than 20 readings will be more than 20 dB readings > 20 dB in patients
dB • Do not know if both sides, or just one-sided • PLUS difference of > 15 dB between the two
(bone conduction > air conduction).
Examination Examination Examination
• sound will be louder in the affected ear. (weber’s • louder in the normal ear (weber’s test) • Mixed
test) • air conduction > bone conduction (Rinne’s
• bone conduction > air conduction (Rinne’s positive)
negative)
Causes Causes: Mixture of both
• Ear wax (or something else blocking the canal) • Sudden sensorineural hearing loss (<72 hours)
• Infection (e.g., otitis media or otitis externa) • Presbycusis (age-related) Exam (age-specific)
• Fluid in the middle ear (effusion) • Noise exposure • Otoscopy ® conductive hearing
• Eustachian tube dysfunction • Ménière’s disease • Tympanometry ® middle ear
• Perforated tympanic membrane • Labyrinthitis • Speech discrimination score® tests CN8 nerve
• Otosclerosis • Acoustic neuroma • < 6mths = Auditory Brainstem Response Testing
• Cholesteatoma • Neurological conditions (e.g., stroke, MS or brain • 6mths – 3 years ® Visual Reinforcement Orientation
• Exostoses tumours) Audiometry (VROA/ puppet show test)
• Tumours • Infections (e.g., meningitis) • Children (3-7 years) ® Pure Tone Play Audiometry
• Medications (e.g. loop diuretics, aminoglycoside • Children (> 7 years) ® Full standard adult test battery
ABx, chemo drugs)



TYMPANOMETRY

, PRESBYACUSIS SUDDEN
EAR WAX EUSTACIAN TUBE OTITIS EXTERNA
[age-related SENSORINEURAL OTOSCLEROSIS OTITIS MEDIA
[cerumen impaction] DYSFUNCTION “swimmer’s ear”
hearing loss] HEARING LOSS
• Impacted wax accumulation Gradual and symmetrical Ø Hearing loss over < 72 Ø Unable to equalise air Ø Remodelling of ossicle bones Ø Infection of middle ear Ø Infection of outer ear
and stuck to eardrum loss of high pitched hours pressure in middle ear and in middle ear -® affects Ø Swimmer’s ear”
PP / sounds 1st drain fluid from middle ear
• ear wax = normally protective Ø Almost always base of stapes ®
comp. unilateral conductive hearing loss
to prevent infection in
external ear Ø Otological emergency Ø Autosomal dominant
• Cotton bud usage • Advanced age • Most idiopathic (90%) Causes • FHx – aut. dominant URTI - Tonsillitis, rhino-sinusitis • Swimming
• Male Other causes: • Idiopathic • Women • Viral URTI (mainly) • Humid environments
• FHx Ø Infection (AOM, AOE, • Post-URTi • Bacterial URTI • Ear polyps
• Loud noise OME, meningitis, • AOM DDx: exostoses o HiB • FB in ear
exposure Mumps) DDx: cholesteatoma Ø Deep diving or swimming Moraxella catarrhalis
o • Bacterial infection
• DM Ø Perforated TM Ø Non-cancerous abnormal cause due to pressure o S. aureus (pseudomonas aeruginosa,
RF / Ø Eustacian tube dysfn changes
• HTN growth of squamous • Passive smoking S. aureus)
causes Ø MS, Stroke, Migraine epithelium in middle ear
• Smoking • Previous ear infections • Fungal infection (e.g. aspergillus, candida) ®
Ø Acoustic neuroma eroding ossicles after ABx usage
• Ototoxic meds Ø Assoc. w/ recurrent infections
Ø Meniere’s • eczema
Ø Cogan’s syndrome and foul d/c
• seborrheic dermatitis
(autoimmune inflam. of Ø Uni conductive hearing loss
Ø Nystagmus, vertigo if invades • contact dermatitis
eyes and inner ear)
semicir. canals
• Conductive hearing loss • Asymptomatic • Unilateral hearing loss < 72 • Reduced hearing • Conductive hearing loss • Otalgia • Otalgia
• Aural fullness (since gradual hrs • Popping noises (lower pitched sound • Unwell + fever • Aural discharge
Clinical hearing loss) affected more)
• Pain • Aural fulness • URTi – cough, coryza and sore • Itchiness
Sx • Tinnitus Rinne negative throat
• Tinnitus • Pain • Conductive hearing loss (blocked ears)
• Tinnitus • +/- vertigo and d/c
• Tinnitus
AOM Ø Irreversible • Permanent hearing loss Ø AOM ® OME • OME Malignant otitis externa ® osteomyelitis in
hearing loss If cholesteatoma: • Perforated TM temporal bone (diabetes, immunsupp. HIV)
Ø Risk of dementia Ø Infection • Labyrinthitis Ø Facial nerve damage
Comp.
Ø Pain • Mastoiditis/abscess ® Ø CNIX, CNX, CNXI damage
Ø Vertigo meningitis Ø Meningitis
Ø Facial nerve palsy Ø Intracranial thrombosis
Otoscope - CERUMEN Audiometry - • Audiometry – diagnosis if Otoscope – normal Otoscope – normal Ø Otoscope – inflamed bulging • Otoscope – inflamed red swollen outer ear with
IMPACTION sensorineural hearing loss>30db in 3 consecutive Ø Tympanometry (check TM Ø Audiometry = conductive red tympanic membrane narrowed external canal
loss (worse at higher frequencies function) ® peak admittance hearing loss • Ear swab - M/C/S and PCR (identify causative
frequencies) • MRI / CT brain - ?acoustic with negative ear canal Ø Tympanometry (reduced organism)
Ix neuroma pressures admittance – stiff, non-
Ø Audiometry compliant TM)
Ø Nasopharyngoscopy Ø HRCT – bony changes
Ø CT scan (structural causes) detected (not useful)
1) Avoid cotton bud usage 1) Hearing protection • Immediate referral to On- 1) NO Rx – allow for self- Conservative Conservative Mild Otitis externa
2) Ear drops (olive oil or 5% 2) Optimise home call ENT within 24 hrs resolution Ø Hearing aids • Reassure - ear toilet and dry • Ear toilet and dry ear (avoid headphone and
Bicarb) environments (e.g • Rx underlying cause 2) Valsalva manoeuvre (to re- ear + avoid swimming swimming for 10 days)
3) Saline irrigation reduce ambient • Idiopathic SSNHL – oral or inflate eustacian tube) Surgical • Simple analgesia (2x Panadol • OTC acetic acid 2% (antifungal and antibacterial
(CI = if perforated eardrum noise during intra-typmanic steroids 3) Anti-histamines or steroid PO tds for 7 days) effect) ® used therapeutically or
Ø Stapedectomy - remove
or infection) conversations) nasal spray for allergic rhinitis entire stapes bone and prophylactically
4) Microsuction 3) Hearing aids 4) Otovent – OTC device where replace with prosthesis Medical – ABx Moderate Otitis externa [use ear wick]
4) Cochlear implants single nostrila blown to inflate attached to oval window • 30mg/kg Amoxicillin PO bd for No Sofradex (dex, framycetin +
eusatican tube Ø Stapedotomy - remove part 5 days perf gramicidin) ear drops (3x drops daily
5) Surgery of stapes and leave base of • Clarithromycin (penicillin for 7 days)
o Grommets stapes attached to oval allergy) or erythron (if pregnant)
Mx o Adenoidectomy window ® new prosthesis Perf Ciloxan (cipro 0.3% ear drops) ® 5x
• Erythromycin (penicllin allergy
o Balloon dilatation attached to connect incus drops bd for 7 days
in pregnant)
eustacian tuboplasty with stapes base
Comp. Ciproxin HC (cipro + hydrocortisone)
Indications for ABx ® 3x drops bd 2 days
For cholesteatoma:
Ø 6/12 old Fungal Triamcinolone (neomcycin + nystatin,
Ø CT head
Ø ATSI gramicidin) 3x drops tds for 7days
Ø Surgicla removal of
Ø Immunocompromised
cholesteatoma y *If severe –Admit to hospital and give IV ABx
Ø Hearing aids (cochlear)
Medical – malignant otitis externa
Ø Only hearing ear
Ø Admit under ENT
Ø IV ABx
Ø CT or MRI (identify extent of infection)

When to refer or follow-up?
• F/U = 8 weeks esp. if recurrent OME, AOM or hearing difficulties
• ENT referral = uncontrolled pain, failure to rsolve w/ AB or ≥6 x episodes in
past 12 months

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