Traumatic Perforation of the Tympanic Membrane

ByTaha A. Jan, MD, Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Reviewed/Revised Jan 2024
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Traumatic perforation of the tympanic membrane can cause pain, bleeding, hearing loss, tinnitus, and vertigo. Diagnosis is based on otoscopy. Treatment often is unnecessary. Antibiotics may be needed to prevent or treat infection. Surgery may be needed to treat perforations persisting for > 2 months, disruption of the ossicular chain, or injuries affecting the inner ear.

Traumatic causes of tympanic membrane perforation include

  • Insertion of objects into the ear canal purposely (eg, cotton swabs) or accidentally

  • Concussion caused by an explosion or open-handed slap across the ear

  • Head trauma (with or without basilar fracture)

  • Temporal bone fracture

  • Sudden negative pressure (eg, strong suction applied to the ear canal)

  • Barotrauma (eg, during air travel or scuba diving)

  • Iatrogenic perforation from instrumentation during irrigation or foreign body or cerumen removal

Penetrating injuries of the tympanic membrane may result in dislocations of the ossicular chain, fracture of the stapedial footplate, displacement of fragments of the ossicles, bleeding, a perilymph fistula from the oval or round window resulting in leakage of perilymph into the middle ear space, or facial nerve injury.

Symptoms and Signs of Traumatic TM Perforation

Traumatic perforation of the tympanic membrane causes sudden severe pain sometimes followed by bleeding from the ear, conductive hearing loss, and/or tinnitus. Hearing loss is more severe if the ossicular chain is disrupted or the inner ear is injured. Vertigo suggests injury to the inner ear. Purulent otorrhea may begin in 24 to 48 hours, particularly if water enters the middle ear.

Diagnosis of Traumatic TM Perforation

  • Otoscopy

  • Audiometry

Perforation is usually evident during otoscopy. Any blood obscuring the ear canal is carefully suctioned at low pressures. Irrigation and pneumatic otoscopy are avoided. Extremely small perforations may require otomicroscopy or middle ear impedance studies for definitive diagnosis (eg, if perforations do not close). If possible, audiometric studies are done before and after treatment to avoid confusion between trauma-induced and treatment-induced hearing loss.

Patients with marked hearing loss or severe vertigo are evaluated by an otolaryngologist as soon as possible. Exploration may be needed to assess and repair damage. Patients with a large tympanic membrane defect should also be evaluated because the displaced flaps may need to be repositioned.

Treatment of Traumatic TM Perforation

  • Dry ear precautions

  • Topical antibiotics for contaminated injuries

  • Sometimes surgery

Often, no specific treatment is needed other than maintaining dry ear precautions. Dry ear precautions include occluding the external canal (eg, using a cotton ball lathered with petroleum jelly) while bathing and showering and avoiding swimming. Routine antibiotic ear drops are unnecessary. However, prophylaxis with antibiotic ear drops is necessary if contaminants may have entered through the perforation as occurs in dirty injuries.

Although most perforations close spontaneously, surgery is indicated for a perforation persisting > 2 months. Persistent conductive hearing loss suggests disruption of the ossicular chain, necessitating surgical exploration and repair.

Key Points

  • Many perforations are small and heal spontaneously.

  • Instruct patients to keep their ear dry during healing; topical or systemic antibiotics are unnecessary unless contamination is significant or infection develops.

  • Surgically repair damage to the ossicles and perforations that persist > 2 months.

Drugs Mentioned In This Article

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