Barotruama, Meniere's disease, and tinnitus.
Hi all,
I'm an ENT Physician Assistant with some aerospace med experience. Ear pain after diving is usually due to inability to valsalva and can cause a mild hemorrhage in the middle ear. It does NOT usually cause any permanent hearing loss. It will usually resolve w/o treatment within a few weeks. Obviously, you shouldn't fly if you can't clear your ears. Sometimes decongestants or steroids may hasten resolution. I advise my patients, both divers and flyers to carry Afrin or it's generic equivalent in case they have some congestion or eustachian tube dysfunction while doing either activity. I tell divers to use it prior to diving (it's hard to snort underwater
.) This is a very common problem and usually doesn't have a longterm impact on passing a class A. If the AME can see your eardrum move when you valsalva they're happy.
Meniere's is a much different animal. Having ringing in the ears (tinnitus) is only part of the problem. Meniere's is dx with three symptoms: 1. tinnitus (usually loud but not always.) 2. Vertigo- lasting hours to days. A few hours is more common. 3. Hearing loss- usually in the mid range and assymetric between ears. Needless to say Meniere's is a bad bad thing for a pilot or diver.
Tinnitus by itself is usually associated with hearing loss- sort of a "phantom limb" pain after an amputation. Those are very good ideas on masking above. If it's intermittent then I would not sweat it. It is a good reminder to wear hearing protection while on the flightline or doing hobbies that involve hazardous noise.
I would encourage you to see your ENT if you have problems or guestions as the above is just info only.
Hi all,
I'm an ENT Physician Assistant with some aerospace med experience. Ear pain after diving is usually due to inability to valsalva and can cause a mild hemorrhage in the middle ear. It does NOT usually cause any permanent hearing loss. It will usually resolve w/o treatment within a few weeks. Obviously, you shouldn't fly if you can't clear your ears. Sometimes decongestants or steroids may hasten resolution. I advise my patients, both divers and flyers to carry Afrin or it's generic equivalent in case they have some congestion or eustachian tube dysfunction while doing either activity. I tell divers to use it prior to diving (it's hard to snort underwater
Meniere's is a much different animal. Having ringing in the ears (tinnitus) is only part of the problem. Meniere's is dx with three symptoms: 1. tinnitus (usually loud but not always.) 2. Vertigo- lasting hours to days. A few hours is more common. 3. Hearing loss- usually in the mid range and assymetric between ears. Needless to say Meniere's is a bad bad thing for a pilot or diver.
Tinnitus by itself is usually associated with hearing loss- sort of a "phantom limb" pain after an amputation. Those are very good ideas on masking above. If it's intermittent then I would not sweat it. It is a good reminder to wear hearing protection while on the flightline or doing hobbies that involve hazardous noise.
I would encourage you to see your ENT if you have problems or guestions as the above is just info only.