The earhole is a 3 cm tunnel which ends at the eardrum. The wall of this tunnel is covered with normal skin and hairs, and has small glands that produce wax. The wax waterproofs and protects the skin. A self cleaning action usually clears the wax away.
Sometimes too much wax is produced or the old wax is not cleared away by the body. The wax may block the tunnel and make you feel deaf or uncomfortable. The usual way to get rid of the wax is either to syringe the ear (flush out the wax with a fast stream of water), sucking out the wax with a special suction device, or carefully extracting it with a special instrument.
If your ear is usually healthy, we will syringe the wax, but like to soften the ear wax first.
If the doctor or nurse finds wax in your ear we suggest you:
1. use warm olive oil or sodium bicarbonate drops (available from your pharmacist)
2. lie on your side, insert 6 drops into the ear
3. stay on your side for 10 minutes, then insert cotton wool to stop the drops running out
4 repeat on the other ear, if necessary
5 do this 3 times a day for 3 days
6 and make an appointment with our Practice Nurse to have your ear syringed.
If you continue to get build ups of wax
in your ears then you may find that using the ear drops regularly
helps the wax drain out.
Do not put things in your ear (like cotton wool buds or bits of
tissue). These can damage the ear.
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