ENT insist that manual removal is far too dangerous and traumatic but that seems to contradict totally my findings on this forum and online in general
Hi
@caliazi
I think you should follow the advice of your ENT doctor and have your earwax removed in hospital using microsuction. Please keep away from private practice and I don't advise manual removal using curette. I think you're just asking for trouble having the wax
manually removed! Providing you apply eardrops 3 times a day to each ear for 7 to 10 days before having the wax removed, you are not likely to have any problems. Please read the post below and click on the links for additional information.
Please don't be put off by people saying microsuction is harmful. Done correctly and using eardrops in the manner I've suggested and in a hospital ENT clinic, I think you'll be just fine. I have had microsuction 3 times and ear irrigation 3 times and had no problems.
Michael
Hi
@Libfuller
I am very sorry to know of your experience at ENT and having microsuction. There is a right and wrong way for this procedure to be carried out. You should have been advised to apply eardrops, using a pipette 3 times a day to each ear for up to 10 days prior to having the microsuction done. This will usually soften the wax enabling it to be easily removed. This also applies if one is going to have the wax removed by ear irrigation or manually removed by "tools" using a curette.
Unfortunately this information is not always told to the patient. I have read on the Internet where private practices advertising their services for microsuction. Telling people there is no need to soften the wax using ear drops before having it done. Other clinics say use eardrops for 3 days or the night before. Totally wrong, inept and unprofessional. People have contacted me saying they went to a clinic and had earwax removed using microscution and were told, eardrops are not needed and ended up with tinnitus afterwards. When they returned to complain, they were brushed aside and told: "none of our other patients" have had any problems.
Even if one uses eardrops in the manner that I've suggested, there is no guarantee that problems wont occur. This also applies whether irrigation is used or curette. Having earwax removed is a medical procedure. A small one and minor some would say, but it can cause serious problems when it goes wrong as you have described. I have had microsuction 3 times and ear irrigation the same and had no problems. I used eardrops for 10 days prior to having the wax removed. I admit I could have still ended up with problems but fortunately I didn't and my tinnitus can reach quite severe levels as I take clonazepam occasionally for it.
I want to make a few things clear. Under normal circumstances ear wax exits from the ear by natural means and doesn't require a visit to a GP surgery to have it removed by ear irrigation, which is the common method used today. However, when a build up occurs it needs to be removed because it can cause problems: Hearing loss, tinnitus, infection, severe pain in the ear, fever, dizziness and the list goes on.
It is very difficult to prove negligence and malpractice against the medical profession. They can afford the best lawyers and one has to have very deep pockets and proof to go up against them and most likely they will lose. I occasionally do tinnitus counselling by telephone voluntarily. Someone contacted me a couple of years ago after having deep root canal work done on three of his teeth. His tinnitus increased to very severe levels and got so bad he wanted to end his life. He spent £7,000 trying to take his dentist to court and had to drop the case when he couldn't find anymore money to pay his lawyers. They milked him dry and were only in it for all they could get.
Michael
https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/the-dangers-of-microsuction.21921/page-3#post-301303
https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/microsuction-and-irrigation.21571/