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In This Topic
Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
Approach to the Patient With Ear Problems
Otorrhea
Etiology
Evaluation
History
Physical examination
Red flags
Interpretation of findings
Testing
Treatment
Key Points
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Chapters in Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Approach to the Patient With Ear Problems
  • Hearing Loss
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Topics in Approach to the Patient With Ear Problems
  • Evaluation of Ear Disorders
  • Earache
  • Otorrhea
  • Tinnitus
  • Dizziness and Vertigo
     
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    Otorrhea

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    Ear Discharge: A Merck Manual of Patient Symptoms podcast

    Ear discharge (otorrhea) is drainage exiting the ear. It may be serous, serosanguineous, or purulent. Associated symptoms may include ear pain, fever, pruritus, vertigo, tinnitus, and hearing loss.

    Etiology

    Causes may originate from the ear canal, the middle ear, or the cranial vault. Certain causes tend to manifest acutely because of the severity of their symptoms or associated conditions. Others usually have a more indolent, chronic course but sometimes manifest acutely (see Table 2: Approach to the Patient With Ear Problems: Some Causes of Ear DischargeTables).

    Overall, the most common causes are

    • Acute otitis media with perforation
    • Chronic otitis media (with a perforation of the eardrum, cholesteatoma, or both)
    • Otitis externa

    The most serious causes are necrotizing external otitis and cancer of the ear.

    Table 2

    PrintOpen table in new window Open table in new window
    Some Causes of Ear Discharge

    Cause

    Suggestive Findings

    Diagnostic Approach

    Acute discharge*

    Acute otitis media with perforated TM

    Severe pain, with relief on appearance of purulent discharge

    Clinical evaluation

    Chronic otitis media

    Otorrhea in patients with chronic perforation, sometimes with cholesteatoma

    Can also manifest as chronic discharge

    Clinical evaluation

    Sometimes high-resolution temporal bone CT

    CSF leak caused by head trauma

    Significant, clinically obvious head injury or recent surgery

    Fluid ranges from crystal clear to pure blood

    Head CT, including skull base

    Otitis externa (infectious or allergic)

    Infectious: Often after swimming, local trauma; marked pain, worse with ear traction

    Often a history of chronic ear dermatitis with itching and skin changes

    Allergic: Often after use of ear drops; more itching, erythema, less pain than with infectious

    Typically involvement of earlobe, where drops trickled out of ear canal

    Both: Canal very edematous, inflamed, with debris; normal TM

    Clinical evaluation

    Post-tympanostomy tube

    After tympanostomy tube placement

    May occur with water exposure

    Clinical evaluation

    Chronic discharge

    Cancer of ear canal

    Discharge often bloody, mild pain

    Sometimes visible lesion in canal

    Easy to confuse with otitis externa early on

    Biopsy

    CT

    MRI in some cases

    Cholesteatoma

    History of TM perforation

    Flaky debris in ear canal, pocket in TM filled with caseous debris, sometimes polypoid mass

    CT

    Culture

    (No use for MRI unless intracranial extension is suspected)

    Chronic purulent otitis media

    Long history of ear infections or other ear disorders

    Less pain than with external otitis

    Canal macerated, granulation tissue, TM immobile, distorted, usually visible perforation

    Clinical evaluation

    Usually culture

    Foreign body

    Usually in children

    Drainage foul-smelling, purulent

    Foreign body often visible on examination unless marked edema or drainage

    Clinical evaluation

    Mastoiditis

    Often fever, history of untreated or unresolved otitis media

    Redness, tenderness over mastoid

    Clinical evaluation

    Culture

    Sometimes CT

    Necrotizing otitis externa

    Usually history of immune deficiency or diabetes

    Chronic severe pain

    Periauricular swelling and tenderness, granulation tissue in ear canal

    Sometimes facial nerve paralysis

    CT or MRI

    Culture

    Wegener's granulomatosis

    Often with respiratory tract symptoms, chronic rhinorrhea, arthralgias, and oral ulcers

    Urinalysis

    Chest x-ray

    Antineutrophilic cytoplasmic antibody testing

    Biopsy

    *< 6 wk.

    TM = tympanic membrane.

    Some Causes of Ear Discharge

    Cause

    Suggestive Findings

    Diagnostic Approach

    Acute discharge*

    Acute otitis media with perforated TM

    Severe pain, with relief on appearance of purulent discharge

    Clinical evaluation

    Chronic otitis media

    Otorrhea in patients with chronic perforation, sometimes with cholesteatoma

    Can also manifest as chronic discharge

    Clinical evaluation

    Sometimes high-resolution temporal bone CT

    CSF leak caused by head trauma

    Significant, clinically obvious head injury or recent surgery

    Fluid ranges from crystal clear to pure blood

    Head CT, including skull base

    Otitis externa (infectious or allergic)

    Infectious: Often after swimming, local trauma; marked pain, worse with ear traction

    Often a history of chronic ear dermatitis with itching and skin changes

    Allergic: Often after use of ear drops; more itching, erythema, less pain than with infectious

    Typically involvement of earlobe, where drops trickled out of ear canal

    Both: Canal very edematous, inflamed, with debris; normal TM

    Clinical evaluation

    Post-tympanostomy tube

    After tympanostomy tube placement

    May occur with water exposure

    Clinical evaluation

    Chronic discharge

    Cancer of ear canal

    Discharge often bloody, mild pain

    Sometimes visible lesion in canal

    Easy to confuse with otitis externa early on

    Biopsy

    CT

    MRI in some cases

    Cholesteatoma

    History of TM perforation

    Flaky debris in ear canal, pocket in TM filled with caseous debris, sometimes polypoid mass

    CT

    Culture

    (No use for MRI unless intracranial extension is suspected)

    Chronic purulent otitis media

    Long history of ear infections or other ear disorders

    Less pain than with external otitis

    Canal macerated, granulation tissue, TM immobile, distorted, usually visible perforation

    Clinical evaluation

    Usually culture

    Foreign body

    Usually in children

    Drainage foul-smelling, purulent

    Foreign body often visible on examination unless marked edema or drainage

    Clinical evaluation

    Mastoiditis

    Often fever, history of untreated or unresolved otitis media

    Redness, tenderness over mastoid

    Clinical evaluation

    Culture

    Sometimes CT

    Necrotizing otitis externa

    Usually history of immune deficiency or diabetes

    Chronic severe pain

    Periauricular swelling and tenderness, granulation tissue in ear canal

    Sometimes facial nerve paralysis

    CT or MRI

    Culture

    Wegener's granulomatosis

    Often with respiratory tract symptoms, chronic rhinorrhea, arthralgias, and oral ulcers

    Urinalysis

    Chest x-ray

    Antineutrophilic cytoplasmic antibody testing

    Biopsy

    *< 6 wk.

    TM = tympanic membrane.

    Evaluation

    History: History of present illness should cover duration of symptoms and whether symptoms have been recurrent. Important associated symptoms include pain, itching, decreased hearing, vertigo, and tinnitus. Patients are questioned about activities that can affect the canal or tympanic membrane (TM—eg, swimming; insertion of objects, including cotton swabs; use of ear drops). Head trauma sufficient to cause a CSF leak is readily apparent.

    Review of systems should seek symptoms of cranial nerve deficit and systemic symptoms suggesting Wegener's granulomatosis (eg, nasal discharge, cough, joint pains).

    Past medical history should note any previous known ear disorders, ear surgery (particularly tympanostomy tube placement), and diabetes or immunodeficiency.

    Physical examination: Examination begins with a review of vital signs for fever.

    Ear and surrounding tissues (particularly the area over the mastoid) are inspected for erythema and edema. The pinna is pulled and the tragus is pushed gently to see whether pain is worsened. The ear canal is inspected with an otoscope; the character of discharge and presence of canal lesions, granulation tissue, or foreign body are noted. Edema and discharge may block visualization of all but the distal canal (irrigation should not be used in case there is a TM perforation), but when possible, the TM is inspected for inflammation, perforation, distortion, and signs of cholesteatoma (eg, canal debris, polypoid mass from TM).

    When the ear canal is severely swollen at the meatus (eg, as with severe otitis externa) or there is copious drainage, careful suctioning can permit an adequate examination and also allow treatment (eg, application of drops, with or without a wick).

    The cranial nerves are tested. The nasal mucosa is examined for raised, granular lesions, and the skin is inspected for vasculitic lesions, both of which may suggest Wegener's granulomatosis.

    Red flags: The following findings are of particular concern:

    • Recent major head trauma
    • Any cranial nerve dysfunction (including sensorineural hearing loss)
    • Fever
    • Erythema of ear or periauricular tissue
    • Diabetes or immunodeficiency

    Interpretation of findings: Otoscopic examination can usually diagnose perforated TM, external otitis media, foreign body, or other uncomplicated sources of otorrhea. Some findings are highly suggestive (see Table 2: Approach to the Patient With Ear Problems: Some Causes of Ear DischargeTables). Other findings are less specific but indicate a more serious problem that involves more than a localized external ear or middle ear disorder:

    • Vertigo and tinnitus (disorder of the inner ear)
    • Cranial nerve deficits (disorder involving the skull base)
    • Erythema and tenderness of ear, surrounding tissues, or both (significant infection)

    Testing: Many cases are clear after clinical evaluation.

    If CSF leakage is in question, discharge can be tested for glucose or β2-transferrin; these substances are present in CSF but not in other types of discharge.

    Patients without an obvious etiology on examination require audiogram and CT of the temporal bone or gadolinium-enhanced MRI. Biopsy should be considered when auditory canal granulation tissue is present.

    Treatment

    Treatment is directed at the cause. Most physicians do not treat a suspected CSF leak with antibiotics without a definitive diagnosis because drugs might mask the onset of meningitis.

    Key Points

    • Acute discharge in a patient without chronic ear problems or immunodeficiency is likely the result of otitis externa or perforated otitis media.
    • Severe otitis externa may require specialty referral for more extensive cleaning and possible wick placement.
    • Those with recurrent ear symptoms (diagnosed or undiagnosed), cranial nerve findings, or systemic symptoms should have specialty referral.

    Last full review/revision January 2009 by Debara L. Tucci, MD, MS

    Content last modified February 2012

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