The skin of the ear canal is very thin and sensitive. Is using cotton swabs to clean your ears dangerous for the eardrum? An ENT specialist gives specific advice to Thanh Nien readers.
According to Associate Professor, Dr. Pham Bich Dao, an otolaryngologist at Hanoi Medical University Hospital, many people have the habit of using cotton swabs to clean their ears, but this is not a good habit.
"Do not clean your ears with cotton swabs due to the risk of damaging the ear canal and eardrum," Dr. Pham Bich Dao noted.
ENT specialists added: Cotton swabs or ear cleaning tools can scratch the ear canal, even perforate the eardrum, if applied too deeply or too forcefully. Because the skin of the ear canal is very thin and sensitive, it is easily damaged when exposed to sharp objects or pressure.
For example, when using a cotton swab to clean your ears after bathing, you may accidentally go too deep. Cleaning your ears with a cotton swab can actually push the earwax deeper. Therefore, using a cotton swab does not remove the earwax, but instead pushes it deeper.
Cotton swabs are common items in daily life, but sometimes they are not used properly.
In fact, cotton swabs only remove the earwax near the outside, but when using force, the remaining part is pushed deep into the eardrum, causing blockage.
When cleaning ears frequently, users feel like their ears are always full of earwax without knowing the reason is because the earwax is pushed deeper, leading to hearing loss, ear pain, and otitis externa.
Cotton swabs can also cause ear trauma (outer ear, middle ear, or even inner ear) if the depth is not controlled, or if there is an accident that leads to infection from the cotton swab, which can cause malignant otitis externa.
In addition, Dr. Dao noted: If you use metal or sharp tools to clean your ears carelessly, you can also puncture your eardrum. In this situation, the consequences are pain, bleeding, hearing loss, and ear infections.
SELF-CLEANING MECHANISM
Many readers share concerns about dirty ears due to lack of hygiene, so they often use tools to remove earwax, including cotton swabs. Dr. Dao said: "Normally, the outer ear canal has a self-cleaning mechanism, so let it do its job." In normal ear cleaning situations, it should be noted that the outer ear cleaning area can be cleaned with a soft, wet towel (or cotton balls), gently wiping the outer part of the ear, including the auricle and the back of the ear. Note that you should only clean the outer areas, avoid putting objects into the ear canal, and always stop before the entrance of the outer ear canal.
Associate Professor, Dr. Pham Bich Dao (Hanoi Medical University Hospital)
When water gets into your ear, you should also not clean your ear. If water gets into your ear (for example when swimming or bathing), you should tilt your head (stand up straight and tilt your head towards the ear that got the water, then gently pull the earlobe up and out (to straighten the ear canal) and shake it gently along with gently rubbing the ear flap. This will help the water to drain out.
According to Dr. Dao, when there is a lot of earwax causing tinnitus and hearing loss, we should not remove the earwax ourselves but should go to an ENT specialist for examination and proper cleaning to avoid causing future damage.
"Many people think that cleaning the ear canal is very simple, but the "task" of removing earwax should be left to the doctor, because there are risks that are not worth taking, because it can cause irreversible hearing damage. Although that percentage is very small, everyone can be in that very small percentage," Associate Professor, Dr. Pham Bich Dao shared.
Source: https://thanhnien.vn/co-nen-su-dung-tam-bong-de-ngoay-tai-185250307172724026.htm
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