Otitis Media
clinical diagnosis of acute otitis media:
1. bulging of TM OR 2. other signs of acute infection (eryhema, pain, fever) AND a middle ear effusion
children <2 years are treated with abx for AOM for ____________
10 days
T or F? acute otitis media can be associated with systemic symptoms like high fever, anorexia, vomiting, and diarrhea
T
T or F? obsertvation can be used as initial treatment of AOM instead of abx in some situations
T
recurrent AOM must be established with symptoms of ___________________ or other signs of __________________
bulging of TM, inflammation
the angle of the eustachian tube is more ACUTE in _______
children
2 situations where topical analgesics cannot be used for acute otitis media
children <2 TM perforation
this group of children needs to follow-up for AOM in 8-12 weeks to ensure resolution of effusion
children <2 or >/= 2 with language or learning problems
this group of children can wait until next health maintenance to follow-up for AOM
children >/= 2 without hearing or learning problems
should be added to amoxicillin for treatment of AOM if considered risk for PCN-resistant strains
clavulanate (augmentin)
recurrent AOM =
development of signs and symptoms of AOM within 30 days after completion of successful treatment
peak incidence of otitis media occurs in _________________
first 2 years of life
surgical treatment of recurrent AOM that is reserved for severely affected children with symptoms of nasal obstruction or recurrent AOM
adenoidectomy
the ______ can cause physical obstruction of the eustachian tubes if they become enlarged, they can also harbor bacteria inside them
adenoids
3 purposes of the eustachian tube
-maintains pressure -prevents reflux of contents of the nasopharynx into middle ear -clears secretions from middle ear
in general, if it lasts longer than ________ it is considered chronic otitis media
3 months
children >2 are treated with abx for AOM for ______________
5-7 days
prophylactic abx therapy for AOM should be limited to a duration of _______________ (usually in high risk fall-winter-spring months)
6 months
children aged ______________, that are healthy and have unilateral non-severe AOM, treatment of observation vs abx is a clinical decision
6 months-2 years
all children __________ old should be treated with abx immediately for AOM
<6 months
who should we consider for tympanostomy tube insertion?
>/= 3 episodes of AOM in a 6 month period OR >/= 4 episodes in a 12 month period *must have complete resolution of signs/symptoms between episodes*
T or F? decongestiants/antihistamines may be useful for treatment of acute otitis media
F
T or F? ear tubes are used to drain fluid
F
T or F? persistent middle ear effusion after the resolution of acute symptoms indicates treatment failure and indicates additional abx therapy
F
treatment of recurrent AOM more than 15 days of completion of abx
amoxacillin-clavulante
initial treatment of failure to high-dose amoxicillin:
amoxicillin-clavulanate
inflammation of the eustachian tube mucosa or extrinsic compression by tumor or large adenoids
anatomic obstruction
5 reasons a child >/= 2 should be immediately with abx for AOM
appear toxic have persistent otalgia >48 hrs have temp > 102.2 in past 48 hrs bilateral AOM or otorrhea uncertain access to follow-uo
is acute otitis media predominantly a bacterial or viral infection?
bacterial
2 abx NOT recommended for AOM that fail to response to high-dose amoxicillin
bactrim, macrolides
treatment of recurrent AOM within 15 days of completion of abx
ceftriaxone or levofloxacin
treatment of AOM if non-type 1 PCN allergic
cephalosporin
2 other abx that may be used for resistant AOM
cephalosporins, levofloxacin
5 reasons someone is considered at high risk for PCN resistant AOM and should be treated with clavulanate + amoxicillin (augmentin)
day care geographic high incidence previous abx treatment within 30 days purulent conjunctivitis history of AOM unresponsive to amoxicillin
4 environmental RFs for otitis media
day care tobacco smoke seasonal variations bottle feeding
__________________provides favorable medium for proliferation of bacterial pathogens (usually from the nasopharynx)
effusion of fluid
failure of normal muscular mechanism of eustachian tube opening or insufficient stiffness of cartilaginous portion of the eustachian tube (more common in infants and children)
functional obstruction
6 RFs for otitis media specific to the host
genetics FH immunodeficient birth defects down syndrome cleft palate
initial abx used to treat AOM
high dose amoxicillin
in acute otitis media, the TM is often _______________to pneumatic otoscopy
immobile
what is defined as treatment therapy FAILURE in treatment of AOM?
lack of improvement by 48-72 hrs after abx therapy started
treatment of AOM if TYPE 1 (severe) PCN allergic
marcolide or clindamycin
surgical option that decreases morbiditiy associated with AOM
myringotomy with tympanostomy tube
in otitis media, eustachian tube function can be disrupted leading to _____________________developing within the middle ear causing transudation of serous fluid
negative pressure
if ears drain after PE tube insertion = ________________
otitis media
refers to an inflammatory process within the middle ear
otitis media
6 ways to prevent AOM
parental education breast feeding ID and treatment of underlying predisposing conditions vaccination abx prophylaxis surgery
an abnormally __________ or _______________eustachian tube may lead to more otitis media infections, more common in down syndrome
patent, short
2 vaccines that may decrease overall rate of AOM
pneumococcal infleunza
the main purpose of PE ear tubes
pressure equalization
small tubes placed in TM to vent the middle ear and prevent negative pressure build up
pressure equalization tube
3 most common pathogens to cause acute otitis media
s. pneumo h. infleunzae moraxella
treatment of acute otitis media
systemic analgesics topical analgesics abx
not indicated unless severe obstruction symptoms or recurrent tonsil infections also evident
tonsillectomy
otitis media is typically preceded by a ________________
viral URI
3 things that impact mucociliary clearance of Eustachian tube
viral infection bacterial toxins inherited abnormalities of ciliary structure