Complications of Otitis Media

Complications of Otitis Media

Complications of Otitis Media

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Overview & Mastoiditis - Spread & Swell

  • OM Complications: Intratemporal (e.g., mastoiditis) & Intracranial (e.g., meningitis).
  • Pathways of Spread (OM):
    • Direct bone erosion (mastoiditis commonest).
    • Thrombophlebitis.
    • Preformed pathways (round window, sutures).
  • Mastoiditis: Most common OM complication. Mastoid air cell inflammation.
    • Acute Coalescent: Pus → bone resorption → cell coalescence → empyema.
    • Key Signs (Swell & Spread):
      • Postauricular pain, swelling, erythema. Pinna down & out.
      • Retroauricular sulcus obliteration ('ironed-out').
      • Sagging posterosuperior EAC wall (pathognomonic).
    • Subperiosteal Abscesses (Mastoid Spread):
      • Postauricular (commonest).
      • Bezold's (SCM).
      • Citelli's (digastric).
      • Luc's (EAC). Complications of Otitis Media Diagram

⭐ Sagging of posterosuperior meatal wall: highly suggestive of acute mastoiditis, indicates bony meatus periosteitis.

Other Intratemporal Complications - Inner Ear Invaders

  • Labyrinthitis (Otogenic)

    • Invasion of inner ear by toxins or bacteria.
    • Types:
      • Serous/Toxic: Common. Toxins enter via round window. Vertigo, SNHL (often reversible).
      • Suppurative: Rare. Bacteria enter via oval/round window/cochlear aqueduct. Severe vertigo, profound irreversible SNHL, nystagmus. Medical emergency.
    • Symptoms: Vertigo, nausea, vomiting, hearing loss, tinnitus.
    • Fistula Test: Positive if erosion of bony labyrinth (e.g., cholesteatoma).
  • Petrositis (Apical Petrositis)

    • Inflammation of petrous apex air cells.
    • Gradenigo's Syndrome Triad: 📌 (DREAM)
      • Discharge (otorrhea)
      • Retro-orbital pain (CN V involvement)
      • Eye (diplopia due to CN VI palsy)
      • AOM/CSOM history
      • Mastoiditis often co-exists
    • Diagnosis: CT scan essential.
  • Facial Nerve (CN VII) Palsy

    • Can occur in AOM (more common in children, often due to dehiscence of Fallopian canal) or CSOM (cholesteatoma, granulation tissue).
    • AOM-related: Usually resolves with antibiotics; myringotomy +/- steroids.
    • CSOM-related: Often requires surgical decompression.

Anatomy of the ear showing facial nerve

High-Yield Fact: In acute otitis media, facial palsy is usually due to inflammation and edema, not direct bony erosion, and often has a good prognosis with conservative treatment. In chronic suppurative otitis media, it's more often due to cholesteatoma eroding the Fallopian canal, requiring surgery.

Intracranial Complications I - Brain's Border Breached

  • Meningitis: Most common intracranial complication.
    • Pathways: Hematogenous, direct extension (e.g., labyrinth, patent cochlear aqueduct).
    • CSF: ↑Protein, ↓Glucose, pleocytosis (neutrophilic).
    • Key Sx: Fever, headache, neck stiffness, altered sensorium.
  • Extradural Abscess (EDA): Pus collection between dura & skull bone.
    • Cause: Bone erosion (e.g., from coalescent mastoiditis).
    • Common Sites: Middle cranial fossa (most common), posterior fossa (via Trautmann’s triangle).
    • Sx: Often insidious; persistent headache, fever, localized tenderness.

Intracranial Complications II & Management - Deep Trouble & Defense

  • Brain Abscess:
    • Most common: Temporal lobe, then cerebellum.
    • CT/MRI: Ring-enhancing lesion.
  • Lateral Sinus Thrombophlebitis (LST):
    • Picket fence fever (septicemia).
    • Griesinger's sign: Mastoid edema.
    • CECT: Empty delta sign. MRV confirms.
  • Otitic Hydrocephalus (Benign Intracranial Hypertension):
    • ↑ ICP, normal CSF & ventricles.
    • Headache, papilledema, VI nerve palsy.
  • Diagnosis:
    • CECT initial; MRI (with MRV/MRA) gold standard.
    • LP: Only after imaging rules out mass effect.
  • Management:
    • High-dose IV antibiotics (broad-spectrum, good BBB penetration).
    • Surgical source control (e.g., mastoidectomy for CSOM).
    • Brain abscess: Neurosurgical drainage.
    • LST: Anticoagulation (case-by-case), possible thrombectomy.
    • Otitic Hydrocephalus: Acetazolamide, therapeutic LPs, V-P shunt if refractory.

⭐ Temporal lobe is the most common site for an otogenic brain abscess.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Meningitis is the most common intracranial complication of otitis media.
  • Acute mastoiditis is the most common extracranial complication.
  • Gradenigo's syndrome triad: otorrhea, retro-orbital pain (CN V), and abducens palsy (CN VI).
  • Bezold's abscess involves pus deep to the sternocleidomastoid muscle.
  • Lateral sinus thrombophlebitis presents with picket-fence fever and Griesinger's sign.
  • Otitic hydrocephalus features raised ICP with normal CSF findings.
  • Facial nerve palsy can complicate both acute and chronic OM.

Practice Questions: Complications of Otitis Media

Test your understanding with these related questions

Subdural empyema is a complication of all the following conditions except?

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Flashcards: Complications of Otitis Media

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Gradenigos syndrome is a triad that consists of:-_____-Deep ear/facial pain (V Nerve involvement)-Persistent ear discharge (otitis media)

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Gradenigos syndrome is a triad that consists of:-_____-Deep ear/facial pain (V Nerve involvement)-Persistent ear discharge (otitis media)

Ipsilateral abducens nerve palsy (VI nerve palsy)

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