Ear clearing: Difference between revisions

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This pressure difference, if not released, can cause:
This pressure difference, if not released, can cause:
* Burst [[eardrum]]. damage. Cold water in the [[middle ear]] chills the inner [[ear]]
* Burst [[eardrum]]. This damages hearing, and cold water in the [[middle ear]] chills the inner [[ear]], causing [[vertigo]].
* Damage to other body air spaces, such as the [[paranasal sinus]]es. This can also be caused by damaged [[simus]] ducts.
* Damage to other body air spaces, such as the [[paranasal sinus]]es. This can also be caused by damaged [[simus]] ducts.


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{{Diving-stub}}
{{Diving-stub}}
[[Category:Scuba diving]]
[[Category:Diving]]

Revision as of 09:21, 12 July 2007

Ear clearing or clearing the ears is any of various maneuvers used to make the pressure in the middle ear become the same as the outside pressure, by lerting air enter along the [{Eustachian tube]]s, as this does not always happen automatically when the pressure in the middle ear is lower. This need usually arises in scuba diving, but can arise in fast descent in an aircraft or a mine cage, on being put into pressure in a caisson or similar.

Methods include:

  • Yawning.
  • Swallowing.
  • Pinching the nose and clising the mouth and trying to breathe out through the nose. This is called the valsalva manoeuvre. If the hand cannot reach the nose, it is possible to learn to pinch the nose shut by the action of two small face muscles called compressor naris.

This pressure difference, if not released, can cause:

Do not dive if a eustachian tube is congested or blocked, e.g. with the common cold. Divers should get proper diver training in clearing the ears.

Precautions:

  • Make sure that the diving suit hood does not make an airtight seal over the outside ear hole.
  • Never wear earplugs.

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