| Ear Infection, Middle |
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Below: What is a middle ear infection? A middle ear infection is simply an invasion of viruses or bacteria into the small space that lies just beyond the eardrum. The germs usually stage the assault while a child is recovering from a cold or flu, ailments that leave her ears partly clogged with fluids and create an ideal habitat for microbes. As the infection takes hold, the middle ear fills with pus, and the growing mass presses against the eardrum and causes considerable pain. Middle ear infections strike 80 percent of all children before their fourth birthday, and they send more young children to the doctor's office than almost any other illness. What are the symptoms? If your child is old enough to talk, she'll probably tell you her ear hurts or itches. She may also have trouble hearing. A younger child may simply tug at her ear and act irritable. Some children cry almost constantly, and most develop a fever. In severe cases, the fluid building up in your child's middle ear can break through her eardrum. Pus will start oozing from her ears, and her fever and pain will probably disappear. The eardrum usually heals by itself. When should I call a doctor? Call a doctor at the first sign of an ear infection. Most would go away quickly even without treatment, but prompt treatment can help prevent hearing loss and other rare complications. If the infection lasts more than two days, call the doctor again. Why does my child get so many ear infections? The eustachian tubes in infants and toddlers seem tailor-made to encourage ear infections. While the tubes in older children and adults slant downward, those in younger children are nearly horizontal. This means that fluid drains slowly from young ears even at the best of times, and the flow in easily blocked. A young child's tubes are also about three times shorter than an adult's, thus giving germs an easy path from her throat to her middle ear. Children get more than their share of ear infections because they catch so many colds. The germs that invade the ear, though, aren't necessarily the same ones that caused the original illness. It takes a virus to trigger a cold or flu, but about 90 percent of ear infections are caused by bacteria. What can my general practitioner do to treat them? Most children who see a doctor because of an ear infection go home with a prescription for antibiotics. These drugs quickly kill the bacteria that cause most ear infections and help prevent long-term complications, particularly if your child's infections keep coming back or tend to last for weeks or months. Make sure your child takes all of the medicine the doctor recommends, even after she starts feeling better. What if the ear infections don't go away? If an infection or fluid build-up lasts for three months, your child should have her hearing checked. If her hearing is impaired, doctors can usually restore it to normal by inserting small tubes through the eardrum that can drain fluid from the middle ear. The tubes will fall out on their own between six months to three years later. The surgery takes just a few minutes and causes little pain or discomfort. You will, however, have to keep water out of your child's ear while the tubes are in place, an annoying task if your child likes swimming or splashing in the bath. What can I do to help my child feel better? You can soothe your child's pain by giving her ibuprofen or paracetamol or by holding a warm compress over her ear. (Never give aspirin to a child or teenager -- especially if he has a fever -- unless a doctor recommends it. Aspirin is associated with Reye's syndrome, a rare but potentially deadly disorder.) Use pillows to keep her head raised while she sleeps; this can help the fluid drain from her ears. Your general practitioner can also prescribe a bottle of analgesic ear drops, which you place in the affected ear with a dropper; many parents have reported this method was successful in getting their wailing child to sleep. If your child has frequent ear infections, you may want to keep a bottle in your medicine chest. Can ear infections be prevented? A mother can take an early step to prevent ear infections by breastfeeding her child. Children who were breastfed have half as many ear infections as other children do. The ailment is also much less common in children who are cared for at home. References Lou Bell, Guide to Common Childhood Infections: The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Hungry Minds, Inc; 1998. Del Mar CB, et al. Are antibiotics indicated as initial treatment for children with acute otitis media? A meta-analysis. BMJ 1997;314:1526 (24 May)
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