Cleaning away earwax could actually damage your hearing

Cleaning your ear with cotton buds could damage one's hearing. PICTURE: Supplied

Cleaning your ear with cotton buds could damage one's hearing. PICTURE: Supplied

Published Jan 5, 2017

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Listen carefully! Cleaning away earwax could actually damage your hearing, experts claim

It's often considered to be a sign of good cleanliness.

But manually removing earwax could actually damage a person's hearing, according to new guidelines by experts in the US.

Researchers at the American Academy of Otolaryngology noted in their updated guidelines on Tuesday that inserting foreign instruments into the ear canal, such as cotton buds, can cause a variety of hearing issues and actually increase cerumen production. 0638383929

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In addition, manually cleaning the ears also increases the chances of piercing the eardrum, dislocating delicate bones and causing infection.

Furthermore, there's an added danger of impaction, which blocks the ear canal and can lead to pain, itching, feeling of fullness, ringing or tinnitus, hearing loss or a discharge or an unpleasant odour.

Dr Seth Schwartz, chair of the American Academy of Otolaryngology, said: “Patients often think that they are preventing earwax from building up by cleaning out their ears with cotton swabs, paper clips, ear candles, or any number of unimaginable things that people put in their ears.

“The problem is that this effort to eliminate earwax is only creating further issues because the earwax is just getting pushed down and impacted further into the ear canal.

“Anything that fits in the ear could cause serious harm to the ear drum and canal with the potential for temporary or even permanent damage.”

He also asserted that, contrary to popular belief, the ear is self-cleaning.

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“There is an inclination for people to want to clean their ears because they believe earwax is an indication of uncleanliness. This misinformation leads to unsafe ear health habits.”

He added earwax or cerumen was a normal substance the body produces to clean, protect and ‘oil’ ears. It acts as a self-cleaning agent to keep ears healthy by trapping dirt, dust, and other small matter to the sticky earwax which keeps them from getting farther into the ear.

Chewing, jaw motion, and growing skin in the ear canal help to move old earwax from inside the ears to the ear opening where it then flakes off or is washed off during bathing.

And this normal process of making wax and pushing the old wax out is continual.

It's only occasionally that this cleaning process breaks down, creating a build-up of wax which collect and blocks the ear canal. This affects one in 10 children, one in 20 adults, and more than one-third of geriatrics.

It should be treated by a medical practitioner with irrigation, syringing or the application of wax-softening agents known as cerumenolytics, such as Sodium Bicarbonate ear drops BP, olive oil, distilled water and acetone.

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