Two parts of the outer ear.
What are the Auricle/Pinna and the exterior auditory canal?
6 to 12 months of age.

What are minimal erythema, air fluid levels/bubbles?
Most common season for Otitis Externa.
What is summer?
Mastoiditis is usually a complication of this disease.
What is Acute Otitis Media (AOM)?
Connects the Middle Ear to the Nasopharynx.
What is the Eustachian Tube?
2 most common bacteria associated with AOM.
What are Strep Pneumoniae and Haemophilus Influenza?
A complication of Otitis Media with Effusion (OME)
What are conductive hearing loss, affects on speech, and delays in development?
Supportive measures to prevent Acute Otitis Externa
The incidence of mastoiditis is highest in children of this age.
What is less than 2 years old?
Lateral boundary of the Middle Ear
What is the Tympanic Membrane?
Most common complication of AOM
What is tympanic membrane perforation?
90% of Otitis Media with effusion resolve with this.
What is time?
Most of common bacteria associated with Acute Otitis Externa.
What is Pseudomonas Aeruginosa?
Most common bacteria associated with Mastoiditis.
What are Haemophilus influenza and Strep pneumonia?
The 3 auditory ossicles.
What are the Stapes, Incus and Malleus?
Preferred antibiotic treatment for AOM in PCN allergic patients.
Two things that may cause more harm than good in treating OME.
What are antibioitcs, steroids, decongestants and antihistamines?
Osteomyelitis of the ear canal often with fever and severe pain.
What is Malignant Otitis Externa?
Preferred initial treatment of Mastoiditis.
What is broad spectrum IV antibiotics?
Cavity in the inner ear that responds to vibration and produces a nerve impulse.
Possible treatment of Otitis Media with Effusion lasting over 3 months.
What is tympanostomy tube placement?
Preferred treatment of Acute Otitis Externa.
What are topical Fluoroquinolone drops?
Destructive, expanding growths of the middle ear consisting of keratinizing epithelial cells that can lead to mastoiditis.
What is a Cholesteatoma?