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Ear tubes are tiny, hollow tubes that surgeons place into the eardrums during surgery. An ear tube allows air into the middle ear. Ear tubes keep fluid from building up behind the eardrums. The tubes usually are made of plastic or metal.
Ear tubes also are called tympanostomy tubes, ventilation tubes, myringotomy tubes or pressure equalization tubes.
Ear tubes might help children who have repeated, long-lasting ear infections, also known as chronic otitis media. Ear tubes also might help children who still have fluid buildup in the ear after an infection clears up. This is called otitis media with effusion.
Most ear tubes are made to fall out in 4 to 18 months. The holes heal on their own. Some tubes are meant to stay in longer. Surgeons might need to remove them in a second surgery. The holes might need to be closed with surgery, as well.
An ear tube is used to treat and prevent the buildup of fluids in the middle ear.
The middle ear is the space behind the eardrum that has three tiny bones that vibrate. An opening in the middle ear leads to a tube that connects the middle ear to the back of the throat, also known as the eustachian tube. This tube has three jobs:
The eustachian tubes of young children are narrower and more level than adults' eustachian tubes are. So they're harder to drain and more likely to get clogged.
Conditions treated with ear tubes have:
Ear tubes might treat the following conditions:
Buildup of fluids without infection, also known as otitis media with effusion. One cause of this is fluid that stays in the ear after an infection. Other causes include problems with the eustachian tubes or another condition that keeps fluid from draining.
Fluid buildup can cause hearing loss and balance problems. Ear tubes might help with hearing problems that cause a delay in speaking or other learning delays. These delays can cause problems in school.
Putting in an ear tube carries a low risk of serious problems. Possible risks include:
Children who have surgery for ear tube placement usually need medicine that puts them to sleep, also known as general anesthesia. The risks of the medicine are low in healthy children. But possible problems include:
Ask your health care team how to get your child ready for surgery to place ear tubes.
Tell your health care team:
Questions to ask a member of your health care team:
Tips for helping a child prepare include the following:
A surgeon trained in ear, nose and throat conditions places ear tubes during surgery.
The surgeon usually uses medicine that puts children to sleep for the surgery, also known as general anesthesia.
The procedure usually takes about 15 minutes. The surgeon:
The team doing the surgery uses tools to watch the child's heart rate, blood pressure and blood oxygen during the surgery.
After surgery, children are moved to a recovery room. The health care team watches for any problems. Children who have no problems usually go home in a few hours.
Children might be sleepy and cranky for the rest of the day. They also might feel like throwing up. Most often, children can go back to their regular activities within 24 hours of the surgery.
Ask your child's health care provider about follow-up care after ear tubes are in. If there are no problems, care usually includes the following:
Reasons to see your child's ear, nose and throat specialist outside of scheduled follow-up appointments include:
Ear tubes often:
Even with ear tubes, children can get some ear infections.