Title: Key issues in ENT for GP Registrars
1Key issues in ENTfor GP Registrars
- Haytham Kubba
- Consultant Paediatric Otolaryngologist
- Yorkhill, Glasgow
2- Permanent congenital hearing impairment
- Glue ear
- Recurrent acute otitis media
- Adenoids and tonsils
- Services on offer at Yorkhill
3Permanent congenital hearing impairment
4Why screen?
- Serious
- Asymptomatic phase
- Treatment available
- Outcome better when treated early
- Test available and acceptable
5How have we screened?
- Universal behavioural tests in infants
- Health visitor distraction test at 8 months
- Targeted objective tests for high risk neonates
- Evoked response audiometry within 6 weeks
6Who is considered high risk?
- Sensorineural deafness in 1st degree relative
- Bacterial meningitis
- SCBU graduates
- preterm lt 32 weeks
- very low birthweight lt1500g
- required ventilation
- known toxic levels of aminoglycosides
- serum bilirubin gt400mmol/l at term
7Health visitor distraction tests
- Distraction test can be effective
- Requires
- good technique
- equipment
- quiet environment
- cooperative child
- Results often poor - 50 deaf children missed by
HV tests
8NDCS targets
- National Deaf Childrens Society 1994
- 40 deaf children identified by 6 months
- 80 by 1 year of age
- Ayrshire results (Kubba, 1996)
- 17 by 6 months
- 40 by 1 year
- UK average age at diagnosis 18 months
9How can we improve?
- Universal neonatal screening
- May use
- evoked response audiometry
- automated response cradle
- otoacoustic emissions
10Universal Neonatal Screening
- Pilot sites - Dundee, Edinburgh, Highlands
- Implemented across Scotland Oct 2005
- Local policies
- test methods
- pass criteria
- infrastructure
11UNHS in Glasgow
- Automated ABR
- 13 screeners in 3 maternity units
- Community follow up clinics
- 95 screen coverage
- 15 new cases of PCHI in 1st year
- Only ½ had risk factors
- Mean age at diagnosis 9 weeks
- Prev 20 months
12Haythams 1st law of screening
- those most at risk of the disease are also the
ones LEAST LIKELY TO ATTEND for screening
13Prevalencebetter ear gt40dBHL
14Take-home message 1Permanent hearing impairment
- UNHS is fantastic, but
- UNHS is not the end of the story
- Constant vigilance throughout childhood
15Otitis media with effusion
16- Bacterial biofilm disease
- Eustachian tube dysfunction is old hat
17- Discredited
- Auto-inflation
- Antihistamines
- Mucolytics
- Decongestants
- Steroids
- Antibiotics
- Shown to work
- Adenoidectomy
- Grommets
18Take-home message 2Otitis media with effusion
- If the child is bad enough to need treatment,
they need an operation
19Recurrent acute OM
- Treat as when
- Antibiotics
- 35 RCTs 3/12 prophylaxis
- Effective, side effects
- Grommets
- Le 1991, RCT n44
- 1.2 fewer infections in 6/12
- Adenoidectomy
- Paradise 1999, Koivunen 2004
- Little or no benefit
20Take-home message 3Recurrent acute otitis media
- Our treatments are largely unsatisfactory
- Watch and wait is often the best approach
21Acute OM
- Antibiotics
- 4 systematic reviews
- no effect on pain scores
- shorten illness
- Outcomes?
- Diagnostic criteria?
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24Take-home message 4Acute otitis media
- Antibiotics never say never
- Beware under 2 years of age
- Incidence of complications is rising
25Chronic otitis mediarecurrent or persistent
otorrhoea
26Take-home message 5recurrent or persistent
otorrhoea
27- Sore throats
- SIGN guidelines
- Often settle without surgery
- Nasal congestion
- Preschool ads
- Settles with time
- School allergy
- Nasal steroids
28Obstructive sleep apnoea
- Features
- Heavy snoring
- Snort arousals
- Disturbed sleep
- Enuresis
- Night terrors
- Fatigue
- Effects
- Poor concentration
- Cognitive impairment
- Fatigue
- Hyperactivity
- Hypertension
- Cor pulmonale
29Take-home message 6TA
- Sore throats, nasal congestion
- usually benign, avoid surgery
- Always enquire about sleep apnoea
- this is serious and needs treating