Toronto Star

Nasal balloon therapy helps fluid buildup in ear infections

- HELEN BRANSWELL THE CANADIAN PRESS

A cheap and simple procedure that seems more like a party trick than medical therapy appears to help young children clear their ears of fluid, a condition sometimes called glue ear.

British researcher­s reported Monday that having affected children inflate a balloon by blowing air through their nostrils helped rid the middle ear of fluid and re-establish its proper air pressure.

Though not all benefited from the procedure, nearly 40 per cent more of the children who used the technique had fluid-free ears at three months when compared to children who didn’t use the nasal balloon therapy, the researcher­s reported in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal, published this week.

The authors said the technique could reduce the needless prescribin­g of antibiotic­s for this problem. Studies have shown antibiotic­s are ineffectiv­e against the condition, but doctors often prescribe them anyway.

Lead author Dr. Ian Williamson said wider use of the technique might also reduce the need for surgeries to insert drainage tubes in the ears of affected children.

“It works early on and some children are benefiting,” said Williamson, a family physician and associate professor of primary care at the University of Southampto­n in Britain.

The term glue ear may not be familiar to Canadians. The proper name for the condition is otitis media with effusion, also referred to as middle-ear fluid.

The condition arises when the eustachian tubes malfunctio­n. These tubes, which connect the ears to the back of the throat, drain fluid from the ears and maintain air pressure balance in the ears.

But in small children, the tubes often become blocked, resulting in a buildup of very thick fluid in the middle ears that can lead to hearing and speech problems.

In most children the problem resolves itself over time, said Dr. Johnna MacCormick, an ear, nose and throat specialist at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario in Ottawa. But some need to have tubes inserted into their ears to drain the fluid.

MacCormick said the study showed the technique is effective for some children and “certainly something to be considered.”

A specially designed balloon is stretched and then fitted onto one end of a nozzle. The child is then instructed to press one nostril closed with a finger and inflate the balloon by blowing through the nozzle with the other nostril.

“That pressure that you generate in the nose is sufficient to open up the tube that isn’t really opening properly,” Williamson explained. “It forces air into the middle ear. Then the fluid can drain out of it.”

The procedure is done three times a day for a month. If the problem hasn’t resolved at that point, daily treatment is recommende­d for another two months.

Dr. Adrian James, an ear, nose and throat specialist at Toronto’s Sick Kids Hospital, said use of the procedure probably could help some children avoid the need for ear tubes.

“Although . . . the study hasn’t shown that it would reduce the need for surgery, if it did a lot of families would be happy for that outcome,” said James.

Neither James nor MacCormick was involved in the research.

Nasal balloon auto inflation — the proper name for the technique — may not be common practice in Canada at this point.

James said doctors at the Hospital for Sick Children have used the nasal balloon kits in the past but have recently had trouble buying them locally.

 ??  ?? A new study suggests an unusual treatment may help resolve fluid buildup in the middle ear, which often afflicts young children.
A new study suggests an unusual treatment may help resolve fluid buildup in the middle ear, which often afflicts young children.

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