Malignant otitis externa
From IDWiki
Background
- Otitis externa that is invasive into adjacent soft tissue and bone
Microbiology
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa (95%), which is never a colonizer in this context
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Aspergillus, rarely
Risk Factors
- More common in patients with diabetes, immunocompromised patients, and frail elderly patients
Clinical Manifestations
- Severe pain and tenderness around the ear and mastoid process, plus purulent drainage from external ear canal
- May spread to involve temporal bone, sigmoid sinuses, skull base, jugular vein, meninges, and brain
- Can cause peripheral palsies of cranial nerves; most commonly VII, but also IX, X, and XII
Management
- Clean and debride the ear canal
- Systemic antibiotics as well as topical eardrops that include a corticosteroid
- Should be antipseudomonal, unless otherwise directed by cultures
- e.g. ceftazidime, cefepime, or piperacillin-tazobactam, with or without an adjunctive aminoglycoside
- Use of external eardrops is debated
- Duration: up to 4-8 weeks if bony involvement seen on CT/MRI
- For Aspergillus, it is treated with voriconazole for at least 12 weeks