Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of patients with hearing and balance disorders

Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of patients with hearing and balance disorders
Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of patients with hearing and balance disorders
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Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of Patients With Hearing and Balance Disorders PowerPoint Presentation

Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of patients with hearing and balance disorders
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Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of patients with hearing and balance disorders

Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of Patients With Hearing and Balance Disorders

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Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of Patients With Hearing and Balance Disorders. Assessment. Inspection of the external ear Otoscopic examination Gross auditory acuity Whisper test Weber test Rinne test. Technique for Using Otoscope. Weber Test. Weber test. Rinne test. Question.

Uploaded on Dec 20, 2019

Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of patients with hearing and balance disorders

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Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of patients with hearing and balance disorders

Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of Patients With Hearing and Balance Disorders

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  1. Chapter 64 Assessment and Management of Patients With Hearing and Balance Disorders

  2. Assessment • Inspection of the external ear • Otoscopic examination • Gross auditory acuity • Whisper test • Weber test • Rinne test

  3. Technique for Using Otoscope

  4. Weber Test Weber test Rinne test

  5. Question Is the following statement true or false? Otalgia is a sensation of fullness or pain in the ear.

  6. Answer True Otalgia is a sensation of fullness or pain in the ear.

  7. Question What assessment is completed with the Weber test? • Air conduction of sound • Bone conduction of sound • Air and bone conduction of sound • Neither air or bone conduction of sound

  8. Answer • Bone conduction of sound The Weber test assesses bone conduction of sound. The Rinne test assesses both air and bone conduction of sound.

  9. Diagnostic Evaluation • Audiometry (hearing test) • Tympanogram (measures middle ear muscle reflex) • Auditory brainstem response (uses electrodes to measure electrical potential from cranial nerve VIII) • Electronystagmography (measurement and graphic recording of changes in electrical potentials created by eye movements) • Platform posturography (tests for vertigo) • Sinusoidal harmonic acceleration (measure compensatory eye movements in response to rotary chair movements; helps identify motion problems like Menieres) • Middle ear endoscopy (scope that examines inside the ear)

  10. Platform Posturography

  11. Sinusoidal Harmonic Acceleration

  12. Hearing Loss • Affects more than 28 million people in the United States • Increased incidence with age—presbycusis • Risk factors include exposure to excessive noise levels • Types • Conductive; caused by external of middle ear problem • Sensorineural; caused by damage to the cochlea or vestibulocochlear nerve • Mixed; both conductive and sensorineural • Functional (psychogenic); caused by emotional problem

  13. Manifestations • Early symptoms • Tinnitus:perception of sound; often “ringing in the ears” • Increased inability to hear in a group • Turning up the volume on the TV • Impairment may be gradual and not recognized by the person experiencing the loss • As hearing loss increases, person may experience deterioration of speech, fatigue, indifference, social isolation or withdrawal, and other symptoms

  14. Guidelines for Communicating With Hearing Impaired Persons • Use a low-tone, normal voice • Speak slowly and distinctly • Reduce background noise and distractions • Face the person and get his or her attention • Speak into the less impaired ear • Use gestures and facial expressions • If necessary, write out information or obtain a sign language translator

  15. Conditions of the External Ear • Cerumen impaction • Removal may be by irrigation, suction, or instrumentation • Gentle irrigation should be used with lowest pressure, directing stream behind the obstruction. Glycerin, mineral oil, ½ strength H2O2, or peroxide in glyceryl may help soften cerumen. • Foreign bodies • Removal may be by irrigation, suction, or instrumentation • Objects that may swell (e.g., vegetables or insects) should not be irrigated • Foreign body removal can be dangerous and may require extraction in the operating room

  16. Conditions of the External Ear (cont’d) • External otitis • Inflammation most commonly caused by bacteria Staphylococcus or Pseudomonas, or fungal infection from Aspergillus spp. • Manifestations include pain and tenderness, discharge, edema, erythema, pruritus, hearing loss, feelings of fullness in the ear • Therapy is aimed at reducing discomfort, reducing edema, and treating the infection. • A wick may be inserted in the canal to keep it open and facilitate medication administration. • Malignant external otitis: rare, progressive infection that effects the external auditory canal, surrounding tissue, and skull

  17. Conditions of the Middle Ear • Tympanic membrane perforation • Acute otitis media • Most frequently seen in children • Pathogens are most commonly Streptococcus pneumonia, Haemophilus influenzae, and Moraxellacatarrhalis • Manifestations include otalgia (ear pain), fever, and hearing loss • Treatment • Antibiotic therapy • Myringotomy or tympanotomy

  18. Conditions of the Middle Ear (cont’d) • Serous otitis media: fluid in the middle ear without evidence of infection • Chronic otitis media • Result of recurrent acute otitis media • Chronic infection damages the tympanic membrane, ossicle, and involves the mastoid • Treatment • Prevent by treatment of acute otitis • Tympanoplasty, ossiculoplasty, or mastoidectomy

  19. Middle Ear Surgical Procedures • Tympanoplasty • Reconstruction of the tympanic membrane • Ossiculoplasty • Reconstruction of the bones of the middle ear • Prostheses are used to reconnect the ossicles to reestablish sound conduction • Mastoidectomy • Removal of diseased bone, mastoid air cells, and cholesteatoma to create a noninfected, healthy ear • Cholesteatoma: benign tumor, an ingrowth of skin that causes persistently high pressure in the middle ear, which causes hearing loss and neurologic disorders and destroys structures

  20. Stapedectomy • Improves hearing by removing the stapes bone and replacing it with a micro prosthesis - a stapedectomy, or creating a small hole in the fixed stapes footplace and inserting a tiny, piston-like prosthesis - a stapedotomy

  21. Stapedectomy for Otosclerosis

  22. Nursing Process: Patient Undergoing Mastoid Surgery—Assessment • Health history • Include data related to the ear disorder, hearing loss, otalgia, otorrhea, and vertigo • Medications

  23. Nursing Process: Patient Undergoing Mastoid Surgery—Planning • Major goals include • Reduction of anxiety • Freedom from pain and discomfort • Prevention of infection • Stable or improved hearing and communication • Absence of vertigo and injury • Absence of or adjustment to altered sensory perception, return of skin integrity • Increased knowledge of disease • Surgical procedure and postoperative care

  24. Interventions • Reduction of anxiety • Reinforce information and patient education • Provide support and allow to discuss anxieties • Relieving pain • Medicate with analgesics for ear discomfort • Note: Occasional sharp, shooting pans may occur as the eustachian tube opens and allows air into the middle ear. Constant throbbing pain and fever may indicate infection • Preventing injury • Safety measures such as assisting with ambulation • Provide antiemetics or antivertigo medications

  25. Interventions • Improving communication and hearing • Note: Hearing may reduced for several weeks after surgery because of edema, accumulation of blood and fluid in the middle ear, and dressings and packings. • Use measures to improve hearing and communication and discussed in “Communicating with Hearing Impaired Persons.” • Preventing infection • Monitor for signs and symptoms of infection. • Administer antibiotics as ordered. • Prevent contamination of ear with water from showers, washing hair, and so on.

  26. Patient Education • Medication education: analgesics, antivertigo medications • Activity restrictions • Gently blow nose only one side at a time and sneeze and cough with mouth open • Note: Patient may need instruction to avoid heavy lifting, exertion, and nose blowing to prevent dislodgement of grafts or prostheses • Safety issues related to potential vertigo • Instruction regarding potential complications and reporting of problems • Avoid getting water in ear • Follow-up care

  27. Conditions of the Inner Ear • Disorders of the vestibular system affect more than 30 million in the United States, and falls resulting from these disorders result in 100,000 hip fractures a year. • Dizziness: any altered sense of orientation in space • Vertigo: the illusion of motion or a spinning sensation • Nystagmus: involuntary rhythmic movement of the eyes associated with vestibular dysfunction

  28. Conditions of the Inner Ear (cont’d) • Tinnitus • Labyrinthitis (inflammation of labyrinth portion of ear; can be viral or bacterial) • Benign positional vertigo (BBPV) • Ototoxicity • Acoustic neuroma: slow-growing benign tumor of the VIII cranial nerve

  29. Ménière’s Disease • Abnormal inner ear fluid balance cause by malabsorption of the endolymphatic sac or blockage of the endolymphatic duct • Manifestations include fluctuating, progressive hearing loss; tinnitus; feeling of pressure or fullness; and episodic, incapacitating vertigo that may be accompanied by nausea and vomiting • Treatment • Low-sodium diet, 2000 mg/day • Meclizine (Antivert); tranquilizers, antiemetics, and diuretics may also be used • Surgical management to eliminate attacks of vertigo; endolymphatic sac decompression, middle and inner ear perfusion, and vestibular nerve sectioning

  30. Question What patient education for post mastoid surgery would be incorrect? • Avoid getting water in the ear. • Constant throbbing pain may be a sign of infection. • Call for assistance to ambulate to prevent injury. • There are no activity restrictions after this procedure.

  31. Answer • There are no activity restrictions after this procedure Patients should be taught to avoid getting water in the ear to prevent injury and potential infection. A constant throbbing pain may be a sign of infection. Patients should call for assistance to get up to prevent injury in case the patient experiences vertigo. There are activity restrictions after this procedure. Patients should be taught to only blow one side of nose at a time and avoid lifting and straining to prevent pressure changes within the ear that might damage the surgical intervention.

  32. Question Is the following statement true or false? A cochlear implant is an auditory prosthesis used for people with profound sensorineural hearing loss bilaterally who do not benefit from conventional hearing aids.

  33. Answer True A cochlear implant is an auditory prosthesis used for people with profound sensorineural hearing loss bilaterally who do not benefit from conventional hearing aids.