| Ear Pain and Headache |  | |
Answer Mastoiditis: The CT scan demonstrates opacification of the mastoid air cells on the right side consistent with acute mastoiditis. Mastoiditis is a rare complication of otitis media that has become more infrequent since the advent of antibiotics. It involves a local spread of infection into the mastoid air cells in the temporal bone that eventually causes bony destruction.
Clinical manifestations of mastoiditis include decreased hearing, otalgia, otorrhea, tenderness, and erythema and swelling over the mastoid process that, when severe enough, may cause auricular protrusion. The condition is most common among young children, often in those who have had recurrent acute otitis media. Although this condition was classically thought to develop after prolonged acute otitis media or after an asymptomatic period after treatment, approximately one third of patients are symptomatic for <48 hours before diagnosis. The diagnosis is confirmed with CT, which demonstrates opacification of mastoid air cells and destruction of the bony cell walls.
Complications may include subperiosteal abscess, meningoencephalitis, subdural empyema or abscess, neck abscess (Bezold abscess), palsy of the seventh cranial nerve (Gradenigo syndrome), labyrinthitis, and venous sinus thrombosis. Organisms typically found on culture to be responsible include Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenza, and Streptococcus viridans. Gram-negative bacteria may occur in debilitated patients or patients with chronic infections. The differential diagnosis of mastoiditis includes otitis media, local cellulitis, posterior auricular lymphadenopathy secondary to local infection, and, in rare cases, rubella.
Treatment involves antibiotics, analgesics, and often surgical drainage. About one half to two thirds of patients respond to a 3- to 6-week course of intravenous antibiotics alone. The rest eventually require surgical intervention. Broad-spectrum penicillins, such as ampicillin-sulbactam or ticarcillin-clavulanate, are the recommended primary agents. Alternative antibiotics include second- or third-generation cephalosporins. All patients with mastoiditis should be admitted to the hospital for consultation with an otolaryngologist.
For more information on mastoiditis, see the eMedicine articles Mastoiditis (within the Emergency Medicine specialty), Middle Ear, Mastoiditis (within the Otolaryngology and Facial Plastic Surgery specialty), and Mastoiditis (within the Pediatrics specialty)
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