This clinical practice guideline is not intended as a sole source of guidance in managing cerumen impaction. Rather, it is designed to assist clinicians by providing an evidence-based framework for decision-making strategies. It is not intended to replace clinical judgment or establish a protocol for all individuals with this condition, and may not provide the only appropriate approach to diagnosing and managing this problem.
Objective. This update of the 2008 American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Foundation cerumen impaction clinical practice guideline provides evidencebased recommendations on managing cerumen impaction. Cerumen impaction is defined as an accumulation of cerumen that causes symptoms, prevents assessment of the ear, or both. Changes from the prior guideline include• a consumer added to the development group;• new evidence (3 guidelines, 5 systematic reviews, and 6 randomized controlled trials); • enhanced information on patient education and counseling; • a new algorithm to clarify action statement relationships;• expanded action statement profiles to explicitly state quality improvement opportunities, confidence in the evidence, intentional vagueness, and differences of opinion; • an enhanced external review process to include public comment and journal peer review; and • 3 new key action statements on managing cerumen impaction that focus on primary prevention, contraindicated intervention, and referral and coordination of care.Purpose. The primary purpose of this guideline is to help clinicians identify patients with cerumen impaction who may benefit from intervention and to promote evidence-based management. Another purpose of the guideline is to highlight needs and management options in special populations or in patients who have modifying factors. The guideline is intended for all clinicians who are likely to diagnose and manage patients with cerumen impaction, and it applies to any setting in which cerumen impaction would be identified, monitored, or managed. The guideline does not apply to patients with cerumen impaction associated with the following conditions: dermatologic diseases of the ear canal; recurrent otitis externa; keratosis obturans; prior radiation therapy affecting the ear; previous tympanoplasty/myringoplasty, canal wall down mastoidectomy, or other surgery affecting the ear canal.Key Action Statements. The panel made a strong recommendation that clinicians should treat, or refer to a clinician who can treat, cerumen impaction, defined as an accumulation of cerumen that is associated with symptoms, prevents needed assessment of the ear, or both.The panel made the following recommendations: (1) Clinicians should explain proper ear hygiene to prevent cerumen impaction when patients have an accumulation of cerumen. (2) Clinicians should diagnose cerumen impaction when an accumulation of cerumen, as seen on otoscopy, is associated with symptoms, prevents needed assessment of the ear, or both. (3) Clinicians should assess the patient with cerumen impaction by history and/or physical examination for factors that modify management, such as ≥1 of the following: anticoagulant therapy, immunocompromised state, diabetes mellitus, prior radiation therapy to the head and neck, ear canal stenosis, exostoses, and nonintact tympanic membrane. (4) Clinicians should not routinely treat cerumen in patients who are asymptomatic and whose ears can be adequately examined. (5) Clinicians s...
The American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Foundation (AAO-HNSF) has published a supplement to this issue of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery featuring the updated Clinical Practice Guideline: Earwax (Cerumen Impaction). To assist in implementing the guideline recommendations, this article summarizes the rationale, purpose, and key action statements. The 11 recommendations emphasize proper ear hygiene, diagnosis of cerumen impaction, factors that modify management, evaluating the need for intervention, and proper treatment. An updated guideline is needed due to new evidence (3 guidelines, 5 systematic reviews, and 6 randomized controlled trials) and the need to add statements on managing cerumen impaction that focus on primary prevention, contraindicated intervention, and referral and coordination of care. Differences from Prior GuidelineThis clinical practice guideline is as an update, and replacement, for an earlier guideline published in 2008 by the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Foundation (AAO-HNSF).1 An update was planned for 5 years after the initial publication date and was further necessitated by new primary studies and systematic reviews that might suggest a need for modifying clinically important recommendations.2 Changes in content and methodology from the prior guideline include the following: addition of a consumer advocate to the guideline update group (GUG); 3 guidelines, 5 systematic reviews, and 6 randomized controlled trials (RCTs); emphasis on patient education and counseling with new explanatory tables; expanded action statement profiles to explicitly state quality improvement opportunities, confidence in the evidence, intentional vagueness, and differences of opinion; enhanced external review process to include public comment and journal peer review; new algorithm to clarify decision making and action statement relationships; and 3 new key action statements on managing cerumen impaction that focus on primary prevention, contraindicated intervention, and referral and coordination of care.
The cues for localization or lateralization are interaural disparities of time and intensity, and neurophysiological studies have elegantly demonstrated that lower-brain-stem neurons, in conformity with anatomical observations, are differentially sensitive to the stimulus parameters that mediate binaural phenomena. Brain-stem responses were obtained using low-frequency (500 Hz) stimuli in various combinations of interaural phase (time) and interaural phase and level presented in-concert and in-opposition through earphones. The findings show that the amplitudes and morphologies of the volume-conducted evoked FFR potentials are differentially altered as a function of time and level variables. There are significant reductions, for example, in the amplitude of the evoked responses due to interaural time differences. Furthermore, for in-concert and in-opposition time and level stimuli, the amplitude changes are distinctly different, reflecting the complex neuronal interactions at the level of the brain-stem nuclei and tracts.
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