Middle Ear Fluid
What is middle ear fluid?
Fluid is normally produced in the middle ear (the space behind the
eardrum) in small amounts. Usually the fluid drains out of the ear
though the eustachian tube into the back of the nose. Ear fluid
can cause a problem when it builds up in the middle ear. This
condition is called otitis media with effusion, or secretory
otitis media.
What causes ear fluid to build up in the middle ear?
After an ear infection, the eustachian tube may be temporarily
blocked and fluid will build up in the middle ear space instead of
draining out normally. After taking antibiotics for the ear
infection, your child may still have fluid left in the middle ear,
but it is no longer infected fluid.
If there is fluid in the middle ear, your child will probably
have:
- a full, congested sensation in the ear
- mildly reduced hearing (temporary).
There is no earache or fever.
How long will it last?
Because the middle ear fluid clears up by itself in 90% of
children, no treatment is needed for most children. The fluid will
slowly go away.
- By 1 month, 50% of children will still have fluid.
- By 2 months, 20% of children will still have fluid.
- By 3 months, only 10% of children will still have fluid.
If there is still fluid in the ear after 3 to 4 months, your child
will probably need ventilation tubes or special medicines because
the fluid will most likely not clear up by itself.
What is the treatment?
- Help your child with temporary hearing loss
Most children with middle ear fluid have a mild hearing loss
(20 to 30 dB). If your child temporarily loses hearing before
age 2, it can interfere with normal speech development.
Although the fluid will probably clear in 1 to 2 months, help
your child deal with limited hearing. Keep in mind that most
children's speech will catch up following a brief period of
incomplete hearing.
When you talk with your child:
- Get close to your child, get eye contact, and get his full
attention. Occasionally check that he understands what you
have said.
- Speak in a louder voice than you normally use. A common
mistake is to assume your child is ignoring you when
actually he doesn't hear you.
- Reduce any background noise from radio or television while
talking with your child.
If your child goes to school, be sure he sits in front near
the teacher. Middle ear fluid interferes with the ability to
hear in a crowd or classroom.
- Restrictions
Your child doesn't have any restrictions because of ear fluid.
Your child can go outside and does not need to cover the ears.
Swimming is permitted unless there is a perforation (tear) in
the eardrum, ear tubes, or drainage from the ear. Air travel
or a trip to the mountains is safe; just have your child
swallow fluids, suck on a pacifier, or chew gum during
descent.
- Medicines
Your child doesn't need any medicines unless he has allergies
or an ear infection. Antibiotics do not help to clear middle
ear fluid.
- Ear recheck
Your child needs to be checked again to be sure the ear fluid
doesn't last longer than 3 months and that it doesn't affect
speech development. Your child's next appointment is
____________________________.
How can I help prevent ear infections?
As long as there is fluid in the middle ear, your child is at risk
for having another ear infection. The following list includes ways
to help prevent getting ear infections.
- Avoid tobacco smoke. Protect your child from secondhand
tobacco smoke. Passive smoking increases the frequency and
severity of infections. Be sure no one smokes in your home or
at day care.
- Avoid excessive colds. Reduce your child's exposure to
children with colds during the first year of life. Most ear
infections start with a cold. Try to delay the use of large
day care centers during the first year by using a sitter in
your home or a small home-based day care.
- Breast-feed. Breast-feed your baby during the first 6 to 12
months of life. Antibodies in breast milk reduce the rate of
ear infections. If you are breast-feeding, continue. If you
are not, consider it with your next child.
- Avoid bottle propping. If you bottle-feed, hold your baby at a
45-degree angle. Feeding in the horizontal position can cause
formula and other fluids to flow back into the eustachian
tube. Allowing an infant to hold his own bottle also can cause
milk to drain into the middle ear. Weaning your baby from a
bottle between 9 and 12 months of age will help stop this
problem.
- Control allergies. If your infant has a continuously runny
nose, consider allergy as a contributing factor to the ear
infections. If your child has other allergies such as eczema,
your healthcare provider will check for a milk protein or soy
protein allergy.
- Adenoids. If your toddler constantly snores or breathes
through his mouth, he may have large adenoids. Large adenoids
can contribute to ear infections. Talk to your healthcare
provider about this.
Call your child's healthcare provider during office hours if:
- Your child develops an earache.
- Your child's speech development is delayed.
- You have other questions or concerns.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2007-05-04
Last reviewed: 2008-06-09
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2009 RelayHealth and/or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.