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Ear Care Tips
- Ear care tips Have your ears examined at least once every year
by your physician, audiologist, or any hearing specialist.
- The ear
is normally a self-cleaning mechanism. Wax acts in a protective
manner, catching particles that may land in the ear. Fine hairs
inside the ear canal constantly move wax and sloughed skin
out of the canal. Wax and skin can build up inside the ear
canal. If the canal is not clean, the eardrum can become completely
blocked, greatly reducing hearing and eventually cause permanent
damage.
One cause of excessive wax buildup is the use of cotton swabs.
A cotton swab is larger than the ear canal. Sometimes, when
you use a cotton swab to clean your ear, you can push wax deeper
into the ear canal and partially or completely block it.
Your doctor
or hearing specialist should remove your excess wax. Do not
try and remove ear wax with cotton swabs, hair pins, or other hard
objects. You can damage your ear canal or eardrum.
To maintain a clean
and healthy ear canal, use an eye dropper to place two or three drops
of pure apple cider vinegar in your ears, two to three times a week.
You can also flush out the ear canal using warm water with a rubber
syringe. Be
very careful in attempting to do this. You do not want to aim
the stream from the syringe directly toward your eardrum.
- If you have itching inside your ear canal, use an eye
dropper to place a few drops of baby oil in your canal once
or twice a week to lubricate.
- Visit your physician or hearing specialist regularly
if you frequently have fluid in your middle ear. Fluid normally
drains from the ear via the eustachian tube. If the eustachian
tube becomes blocked, fluid can:
- cause damage to the small bones in the
middle ear,
- cause extreme pain, and
- possibly rupture the eardrum.
- If
pus flows from any part of your ear, you probably have some
kind of infection and should see a physician immediately. You
can lose your hearing if you allow the condition to continue.
- Common symptoms associated with hearing impairment
are ringing sounds in the ears, a feeling of pressure in the
ears, and dizziness. Call your doctor your hearing health care
professional to test your hearing if you experience these symptoms,
particularly if you've recently began taking a new medication
or experienced some kind of head trauma.
- Common childhood diseases such as mumps,
measles, scarlet fever, whooping cough, or any high fever can
leave permanent hearing impairment. Always have your child's
hearing tested if he/she has had any of these conditions in
addition to regular ear care.
- Women
who are exposed to German measles, measles, mumps, or any other
viral diseases during their pregnancies have a very high risk
of giving birth to a baby with serious hearing impairment.
Have your baby's hearing tested if you have been exposed to
these conditions during your pregnancy, or even if you suspect
hearing impairment.
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