Auricular Hematoma

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Auricular Hematoma - Ear's Blood Blister

Auricular hematoma

⭐ Auricular hematoma is a collection of blood between the auricular cartilage and its overlying perichondrium.

  • Etiology: Commonly due to blunt trauma (e.g., wrestling, boxing, rugby).
  • Pathophysiology: Shearing forces separate cartilage from perichondrium, causing blood to pool. This compromises cartilage nutrition.
  • Clinical Features: Tender, fluctuant, bluish swelling on the auricle, obscuring normal contours.
  • Complications: Untreated hematomas can lead to

Mechanism & Mayhem - How It Happens

Direct trauma or shearing forces to the auricle initiate the cascade:

⭐ Shearing forces are the primary culprits, leading to separation of the perichondrium from the underlying avascular cartilage.

This cartilage relies on the overlying perichondrium for its viability.

Spotting the Swelling - Signs & Symptoms

  • Onset: Develops within hours (typically 2-24 hours) post-trauma to the ear.
  • Appearance:
    • Smooth, tense, fluctuant swelling on the auricle.
    • Bluish or erythematous discoloration.
    • Loss of normal auricular contours.
  • Location: Most common on the anterior surface, between cartilage and perichondrium (e.g., scaphoid fossa, concha).
  • Symptoms:
    • Pain, often significant and throbbing.
    • Tenderness on palpation.
    • Sensation of pressure or fullness.

Auricular hematoma diagram with labels

⭐ A key diagnostic feature is a fluctuant, tender swelling on the auricle, typically appearing hours after trauma.

Drain & Defend - Treatment Tactics

  • Goal: Evacuate hematoma, prevent re-accumulation & infection, preserve cartilage.
  • Intervention Timing:
    • Ideal: Within 24-72 hours.
    • Acceptable: Up to 7 days post-injury.
  • Procedures:
    • Needle Aspiration: For small, acute hematomas (<2 cm, <24-48 hours old).
    • Incision & Drainage (I&D): For larger, older, or recurrent hematomas.
      • Curvilinear incision along skin crease.
      • Evacuate clot, irrigate.
  • Pressure Dressing (Crucial):
    • Conforming dressing to prevent dead space & re-accumulation.
    • Methods: Dental rolls (bolsters), buttons, silicone splints, mattress sutures.
    • Maintain for 5-7 days.
  • Antibiotics:
    • Prophylactic anti-staphylococcal (e.g., Flucloxacillin, Clindamycin) for 7-10 days.
  • Follow-up:
    • Regular checks for re-accumulation or infection.

⭐ Prompt drainage (ideally within 24-72 hours, but acceptable up to 7 days) and application of a conforming pressure dressing are crucial to prevent cauliflower ear.

Auricular hematoma drainage procedure steps

Cauliflower Calamity - Risks & Safeguards

Cauliflower ear formation from subperichondrial hematoma

  • Risks of Neglect:
    • Cartilage necrosis, perichondritis/abscess.
    • Permanent "Cauliflower Ear" deformity.
      • Cosmetic & functional impairment.
    • Hematoma recurrence.
  • Key Safeguards:
    • Urgent drainage (ideally <48h, max 7 days).
    • Strict asepsis.
    • Effective pressure dressing (bolsters/buttons).
    • Consider antibiotics (e.g., anti-staphylococcal).
    • Vigilant follow-up.

⭐ Cauliflower ear (perichondrial chondroneogenesis) results from cartilage ischemia, inflammation, and subsequent disorganized fibrocartilage formation if the hematoma is not evacuated.

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Auricular hematoma: Blood collection between auricular cartilage and its perichondrium.
  • Typically results from blunt trauma (e.g., contact sports).
  • Risk of cauliflower ear (fibrocartilaginous deformity) if untreated due to cartilage necrosis.
  • Urgent drainage (ideally < 48 hours, max 7 days) prevents deformity.
  • Management: Incision & Drainage followed by a compressive pressure dressing.
  • Maintain strict asepsis to avoid perichondritis, a serious complication.
  • Reaccumulation is common without adequate, sustained pressure post-drainage.

Practice Questions: Auricular Hematoma

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