Review – Kaplan Pediatrics: ENT Disorders
Otitis externa (swimmer’s ear)
Normal flora of external canal includes Pseudomonas aeruginosa (most common cause), S. aureus (second most common cause), coagulase-negative Staphylococcus, diphtheroids, Micrococcus spp., and viridans streptococci
Causes—excessive wetness, dryness, skin pathology, or trauma
Symptoms—significant pain (especially with manipulation of outer ear), conductive hearing loss
Findings—edema, erythema, and thick otorrhea, preauricular nodes
Malignant external otitis is invasive to temporal bone and skull base—with facial paralysis, vertigo, other cranial nerve abnormalities
Requires immediate culture, intravenous antibiotics, and imaging (CT scan)
→ may need surgery
Treatment—topical otic preparations ± corticosteroids
Prevention—ear plugs, thorough drying of canal, and 2% acetic acid after getting wet
Middle Ear
Otitis media (OM)
A 4-year-old child is seen in the office with a 3-day history of fever and cold symptoms, and now complains of right ear pain. Physical examination is remarkable for a bulging tympanic membrane with loss of light reflex and landmarks.
Acute, suppurative otitis media; accompanied by a variable degree of hearing loss (20–30 dB)
Etiology
Bacterial in up to 75%
- pneumoniae (40%)
Nontypeable H. influenzae (25–30%)
Moraxella catarrhalis (10–15%)
Age—most in first 2 years Sex—boys > girls
Race—more in Native Americans, Inuit SES—more with poverty Genetic—heritable component
Breast milk versus formula—protective effect of breast milk Tobacco smoke—positive correlation
Exposure to other children—positive correlation Season—cold weather
Congenital anomalies—more with palatal clefts, other craniofacial anomalies, and Down syndrome
– Other 5%—Group A strep, S. aureus, gram negatives (neonates and hospitalized very young infants), respiratory viruses (rhinovirus, RSV most often)
Pathogenesis
Interruption of normal eustachian tube function (ventilation) by obstruction →
inflammatory response → middle ear effusion → infection; most with URI
Shorter and more horizontal orientation of tube in infants and young children allows for reflux from pharynx (and in certain ethnic groups and syndromes)
Clinical findings—highly variable
Symptoms—ear pain, fever, purulent otorrhea (ruptured tympanic membrane), irritability, or no symptoms
Pneumatic otoscopy—fullness/bulging or extreme retraction, intense erythema (otherwise erythema may be from crying, fever, sneezing; erythema alone is insufficient unless intense), some degree of opacity (underlying effusion)
Mobility is the most sensitive and specific factor to determine presence of a middle ear effusion (pneumatic otoscopy)
Diagnosis—must have:
Acute onset
Tympanic membrane inflammation
Middle ear effusion
Treatment—It is advisable to use routine antimicrobial treatment especially for age <2 years or those systemically ill, with severe infection, or with a history of recurrent acute otitis media.
First-line drug of choice = amoxicillin (high dose)
Alternate first-line drug or history of penicillin allergy = azithromycin
Duration—10 days; shorter if mild, older child
Follow up—within days for young infants, continued pain or severe; otherwise 2 weeks (sustained improvement seen in TM)
Second-line drugs—if continued pain after 2–3 days
Amoxicillin — clavulinic acid (effective against b-lactamase producing strains)
Cefuroxime axetil (unpalatable, low acceptance)
IM ceftriaxone (may need repeat 1–2´; for severe infection if oral not possible), if patient is not taking/tolerating oral medications
Also maybe cefdinir (very palatable, shorter duration)
If clinical response to good second-line drug is unsatisfactory, perform myringotomy or tympanoscentesis
Otitis media with effusion (OME)
Generally after repeated infections with insufficient time for effusion to resolve
Fullness is absent or slight or TM retracted; no or very little erythema
Treatment
Monthly evaluation
Assess hearing if effusion >3 months; most resolve without problems
Recent studies suggest that in otherwise healthy children an effusion up to 9 months in both ears during first 3 years of life poses no developmental risks at 3–4 years of life.
Routine antibiotic prophylaxis is not recommended.
Tympanostomy tubes
Suggested at 6–12 months of continued bilateral OME or 4 months with bilateral hearing loss
Likelihood that middle ear ventilation will be sustained for at least as long as tubes remain in (average 12 months)
Complications
Acute mastoiditis—displacement of pinna inferiorly and anteriorly and inflammation of posterior auricular area; pain on percussion of mastoid process
Diagnosis—When suspected or diagnosed clinically, perform CT scan of temporal bone.
Treatment—myringotomy and IV antibiotics (S. pneumoniae, nontypable
- influenzae, P. aeroginosa); if bone destruction, intravenous antibiotics and
mastoidectomy
Acquired cholesteatoma = cyst-like growth within middle ear or temporal bone; lined by keratinized, stratified squamous epithelium
Most with long-standing chronic otitis media
Progressively expands—bony resorption and intracranially; life-threatening
Discrete, white opacity of eardrum through a defect in TM or persistent malodorous ear discharge
CT scan to define presence and extent
Treatment—tympanomastoid surgery
Choanal atresia
A newborn is noted to be cyanotic in the wellborn nursery. On stimulation, he cries and becomes pink again. The nurse has difficulty passing a catheter through the nose.
Unilateral or bilateral bony (most) or membranous septum between nose and pharynx
Half have other anomalies (CHARGE association)
Unilateral—asymptomatic for long time until first URI, then persistent nasal discharge with obstruction
Bilateral—typical pattern of cyanosis while trying to breathe through nose, then becoming pink with crying; if can breathe through mouth, will have problems while feeding
Diagnosis
Inability to pass catheter 3−4 cm into nasopharynx
Fiberoptic rhinoscopy
Best way to delineate anatomy is CT scan
Treatment
Establish oral airway, possible intubation
Transnasal repair with stent(s)
Foreign body
Any small object
Clinical—unilateral purulent, malodorous bloody discharge
Diagnosis—may be seen with nasal speculum or otoscope; lateral skull film if radiopaque (may have been pushed back, embedded in granulation tissue)
Treatment—if cannot easily remove with needle-nose forceps, refer to ENT
Epistaxis
An 8-year-old child has repeated episodes of nosebleeds. Past history, family history, and physical examination are unremarkable.
Common in childhood; decreases with puberty
Most common area—anterior septum (Kiesselbach plexus), prone to exposure
Etiology
Digital trauma (nose picking; most common)
Dry air (especially winter)
Allergy
Inflammation (especially with URI)
Nasal steroid sprays
Severe GERD in young infants
Congenital vascular anomalies
Clotting disorders, hypertension
Treatment—most stop spontaneously
Compress nares, upright, head forward; cold compress
If this does not work, then local oxymetazolone or phenylephrine
If this does not work, then anterior nasal packing; if appears to be coming posteriorly, need posterior nasal packing
If bleeding site identified, cautery
Use humidifier, saline drops, petrolatum for prevention
Polyps
Benign pedunculated tumors from chronically inflamed nasal mucosa
Usually from ethmoid sinus external to middle meatus
Most common cause is cystic fibrosis—suspect in any child <12 years old with polyp; EVEN in absence of other typical symptoms
May also be associated with the Samter triad (polyps, aspirin sensitivity, asthma)
Presents with obstruction → hyponasal speech and mouth breathing; may have profuse mucopurulent rhinorrea
Examination—generally glistening, gray, grape-like masses
Treatment—intranasal steroids/systemic steroids may provide some shrinkage (helpful in CF); remove surgically if complete obstruction, uncontrolled rhinorrhea, or nose deformity.
Sinusitis
Acute—viral versus bacterial
Most with URI—most viral, self-limited; up to 2% complicated by bacterial sinusitis
Sinus development
Ethmoid and maxillary present at birth, but only ethmoid is pneumatized
Sphenoid present by 5 years
Frontal begins at 7–8 years and not completely developed until adolescence
Etiology—S. pneumonia, nontypeable H. influenzae, M. catarrhalis; S. aureus in chronic cases
May occur at any age
Predisposed with URI, allergy, cigarette smoke exposure
Chronic—immune deficiency, CF, ciliary dysfunction, abnormality of phagocytic function, GERD, cleft palate, nasal polyps, nasal foreign body
Pathophysiology—fluid in sinuses during most URIs from nose blowing. Inflammation and edema may block sinus drainage and impair clearance of bacteria.
Clinical features
Nonspecific complaints—nasal congestion, discharge, fever, cough
Less commonly—bad breath, decreased sense of smell, periorbital edema headache, face pain
Sinus tenderness only in adolescents and adults; exam mostly shows mild erythema and swelling of nasal mucosa and discharge
Diagnosis—entirely historical and clinical presentation (evidence-based)
Persistent URI symptoms without improvement for at least 10 days
Severe respiratory symptoms with purulent discharge and temperature at least 38.9°C (102°F) for at least 3 consecutive days
Only accurate method to distinguish viral versus bacterial is sinus aspirate and culture, but this is NOT done routinely
Sinus films/CT scans—show mucosal thickening, opacification, air-fluid levels, but does not distinguish viral versus bacterial
Treatment
Initial—amoxicillin (adequate for majority)
Alternative—cefuroxime axetil, cefpodoxime, azithromycin
Treat 7 days past improvement
If still does not work—to ENT (maxillary sinus aspirate)
Throat
Acute pharyngitis
An 8-year-old girl complains of acute sore throat of 2 day’s duration, accompanied by fever and mild abdominal pain. Physical examination reveals enlarged, erythematous tonsils with exudate and enlarged, slightly tender cervical lymph nodes.
Viruses versus group A beta-hemolytic strep (GABHS)
Viral—typical winter and spring; close contact
GABHS—uncommon <2–3 years of age; increased incidence in childhood, then decreases in adolescence; all year long (but most in cold months)
Clinical presentation
Strep pharyngitis
Rapid onset
Severe sore throat and fever
Headache and gastrointestinal symptoms frequently
Exam—red pharynx, tonsilar enlargement with yellow, blood-tinged exudate, petechiae on palate and posterior pharynx, strawberry tongue, red swollen uvula, increased and tender anterior cervical nodes
Scarlet fever—from GABHS that produce one of three streptococcal pyogenic exotoxins (SPE A, B, C); exposure to each confers a specific immunity to that toxin, and so one can have scarlet fever up to three times
Findings of pharyngitis plus circumoral pallor
Red, finely papular erythematous rash diffusely that feels like sandpaper
Pastia’s lines in intertriginous areas
Viral—more gradual; with typical URI symptoms; erythematous pharynx, no pus
° Pharyngoconjunctival fever (adenovirus)
Coxsackie:
} Herpangina—small 1–2 mm vesicles and ulcers on posterior pharynx
} Acute lymphonodular pharyngitis—small 3–6 mm yellowish-white nodules on posterior pharynx with lymphadenopathy
} Hand-foot-mouth disease—inflamed oropharynx with scattered vesicles on tongue, buccal mucosa, gingiva, lips, and posterior pharynx
→ ulcerate; also on hands and feet and buttocks; tend to be painful
Diagnosis of strep
First—rapid strep test; if positive, do not need throat culture
But must confirm a negative rapid test with cultures if clinical suspicion is high
Treatment—early treatment only hastens recovery by 12–24 hours but prevents acute rheumatic fever if treated within 9 days of illness
Penicillin
Allergy—erythromycin
Complications
Retropharyngeal and lateral pharyngeal abscess—deep nodes in neck; infection from extension of localized infection of oropharynx
Clinical—nonspecific—fever, irritability, decreased oral intake, neck stiffness, torticollis, refusal to move neck, muffled voice
Examination—bulging of posterior or lateral pharyngeal wall
Soft tissue neck film with head extended may show increase width
Definitive diagnosis—incision and drainage, C and S—most polymicrobial (GABHS, anaerobes, S. aureus)
Treatment
} Intravenous antibiotics + surgical drainage
} Third-generation cephalosporin plus ampicillin/sulbactam or clindamycin
} Surgical drainage needed if respiratory distress or failure to improve
Peritonsillar abscess—bacterial invasion through capsule of tonsil
Typical presentation—adolescent with recurrent history of acute pharyngotonsillitis
Sore throat, fever, dysphagia, trismus
Examination—asymmetric tonsillar bulge with displacement of uvula away from the affected side is diagnostic
GABHS + mixed oropharyngeal anaerobes
Treatment
} Antibiotics and needle aspiration
} Incision and drainage
} Tonsillectomy if recurrence or complications (rupture with aspiration)
Indications for tonsillectomy, and adenoidectomy
Tonsillectomy
Rate of strep pharyngitis
} ≥7 documented infections within the past year
} 5/year for 2 years
} 3/year for 3 years
– Unilateral enlarged tonsil (neoplasm most likely but rare)
Adenoidectomy
Chronic nasal/sinus infection failing medical treatment
Recurrent/chronic OM in children with tympanostomy tubes and persistent otorrhea
Nasal obstruction with chronic mouth-breathing and loud snoring
Tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy
> 7 infections
Upper airway obstruction secondary to hypertrophy resulting in sleep-disordered breathing and complications