Be a fan of ScubaBoard.com

Welcome to ScubaBoard, an online scuba diving forum community where you can join over 185,000 divers from around the world discussing all things related to Scuba Diving. To gain full access to ScubaBoard (and make this large box go away) you must register for a free account. As a registered member you will be able to:

  • Participate in over 500 dive topic forums and browse from over 5,500,000 posts.
  • Communicate privately with other divers from around the world.
  • Post your own photos or view from well over 100,000 user submitted images.
  • Gain access to our free classifieds marketplace to buy, sell and trade gear, travel and services.
  • Use the calendar to organize your events and enroll in other members' events.
All this and much more is available to you absolutely free when you register for an account, so sign up today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact the ScubaBoard Support Team.
Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 25


  1. #1
    ScubaBoard Contributor


    Has not set a "status"
     

    LobstaMan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    Norton, MA
    Posts
    851
    Dives
    100 - 199

    Question Right Ear Blocked/Water in Ear?

    Did two dives on Wednesday to 60fsw each(cold). After second dive felt like the hearing in my right ear was muffled. I did have to stop and clear my ears once on descent after right ear wouldn't equalize. At the time it felt like water got in behind my eardrum. Still feels the same way, but I can equalize both ears on land now. Absolutely no pain or discomfort now or then, just an odd sensation like a cotton ball stuck in my ear. This happened once about 12 years ago while diving in CA and it went away by itself(in fact, it was worse that time).

    What do I have? Water behind my eardrum? There's no pain now nor was there any at the time, so I really don't believe I have an injury. Can I take one of those ear drying solutions, just wait it out or just see an MD? What about further dives?

    Thanks for the advice,

    LobstaMan
    To alcohol! The cause of - and solution to - all life's problems!

    Homer J. Simpson

  2. #2
    Frequent Poster


    Has not set a "status"
     

    SCUBA STEVE's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Posts
    63
    I am having the same problem right now. Went diving last Sunday everything was fine until Thursday night my left ear felt like it had a lot of pressure on the inside. No pain, still could hear fine. Friday morning woke up for work and started having some pain. Called my ENT, went in and he said my ear canal was starting to close up. So, now I have a wick in my ear can't hear crap, and feels like someone has a knife in my ear turning it. Said it was a nasty case of swimmers ear. MY QUESTION IS- is swimmers ear both the pressure on the inner ear (behind the eardrum) and my ear canal closing up? I have some questions I am going to ask the Dr. when I go back, especially about the mix to wash out your ears. If that will keep this from happening, I will use it after every dive. My advice is go see a ENT.

  3. #3
    Divemaster
    Badge


    Has not set a "status"
     

    RiverRat's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    Connecticut
    Posts
    1,465
    Dives
    200 - 499
    Photos
    81
    LobstaMan

    Yes, go see an ENT. I squeezed my ears during OW dives and it took 3 weeks to heal, no diving. He prescribed Nasonex spray to help open me up. I'm prone to swollen nasal passages from allergies. The idea was the Nasonex "opened me up" to allow better drainage and the ears healed on their own.
    Just because you have no pain now and it only feels like water in your ears does not mean you don't have an injury.

    SCUBA STEVE
    Swimmer's ear is an infection of the outer ear canal. Swelling, itchy, peeling skin. I'm not sure if it can get so bad as to swell the canal closed.
    The "mix" you are referring to changes the PH of the ear to kill the infection.
    I use 50% vinegar, 50% alcohol. Some folks use peroxide and vinegar. This basically changes the PH of the ear to acidic so the infection can't grow. Commercial products do the same thing.

    Ear squeeze is when you fail to equalize properly (unless it's a reverse squeeze) causing pressure on the ear drum resulting in trauma. That trauma in turn causes fluid (plasma) to build up inside the ear causing that "water in the ear" feeling. If you really squeeze your ears bad enough you can rupture the eardrum, causing water to enter. The pain will then go away (you equalized :-)) but you now have a serious problem.

    You may have both an infection and a squeeze.

    I'm not a doctor so seek out a qualified ENT. There are many posts on the board about this stuff and somewhere there is a link to a good video on ear squeeze and physiology.

    Good luck, dive safe
    Originally Posted by Thalassamania.....
    Remember, there's no such thing as "safe," all you can do is intelligently minimize risk.

    Check out www.NorthernScuba.com
    Support Matt! www.Divingadream.org

  4. #4
    ScubaBoard Contributor


    Has not set a "status"
     

    LobstaMan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    Norton, MA
    Posts
    851
    Dives
    100 - 199
    Upon some research on the internet, I believe what I have might be 'Otitis Media w/ effusion'. In other words, water behind the eardrum w/o an ear infection. According to a few web sites, it should go away after two to four weeks or so. That's what happened to me the last time I had this condition.

    LobstaMan
    To alcohol! The cause of - and solution to - all life's problems!

    Homer J. Simpson

  5. #5
    Advisor
    Go Red - Support SB!

    Doing a full Life!
     

    Rick Inman's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Spokane, WA
    Posts
    9,476
    Photos
    222
    Quote Originally Posted by LobstaMan
    Upon some research on the internet, I believe what I have might be 'Otitis Media w/ effusion'. In other words, water behind the eardrum w/o an ear infection. According to a few web sites, it should go away after two to four weeks or so. That's what happened to me the last time I had this condition.

    LobstaMan
    Ah ha! Me, too. Here is my post in this thread:http://www.scubaboard.com/showthread...eadid=68334&s=
    Quote Originally Posted by Rick Inman
    Oh, oh. Don't do what I did (and don't show my wife this thread).
    I made a shallow dive, 0-25', and we did a lot of up and down to see where we were in the river. After the dive, my left ear was plugged. Didn't hurt, but the hearing was terrible, which was bad news 'cause I spent the next week in the studio mixing with one ear. Not good.
    Anyway, the ear stayed plugged about two weeks, and I continued to dive - in fact I did 12 dives like that! You think it's hard to hear with a hood on, try it with one ear plugged!
    Finally, after the 12th dive, while driving over a mountain pass at 3200', the ear just cleared right up. That was two weeks ago and I've made several dives with no ill effects.
    But, like I said, don't do what I did. Go to a doctor.
    A legitimate adventure has no predetermined outcome. - Chatterton

    A flawlessly working rebreather is almost as dangerous as a completely unreliable unit since reliability encourages complacency.
    - Howard Hall stating the Richard Pyle Paradox

    Decompression algorithms are akin to measuring with a micrometer, marking with chalk and cutting with an ax. - Rick Murchison



    Read this and protect our right to post on ScubaBoard!


    to ScubaBoard's Legal Defense Fund


  6. #6
    ScubaBoard Contributor


    Has not set a "status"
     

    Afraid_of_Fish's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Boston, MA, USA
    Posts
    642
    Quote Originally Posted by LobstaMan
    Did two dives on Wednesday to 60fsw each(cold). After second dive felt like the hearing in my right ear was muffled. I did have to stop and clear my ears once on descent after right ear wouldn't equalize. At the time it felt like water got in behind my eardrum. Still feels the same way, but I can equalize both ears on land now. Absolutely no pain or discomfort now or then, just an odd sensation like a cotton ball stuck in my ear. This happened once about 12 years ago while diving in CA and it went away by itself(in fact, it was worse that time).

    What do I have? Water behind my eardrum? There's no pain now nor was there any at the time, so I really don't believe I have an injury. Can I take one of those ear drying solutions, just wait it out or just see an MD? What about further dives?

    Thanks for the advice,

    LobstaMan
    This happened to me after my first dive trip to Florida. I went to the doctor and he said (ironicly he is also a diver, so he knows all about it) as long as it wasn't bothering me while I was diving, it was most probably a minor infection (I get those a lot. I have a lot of problems with my ears and diving).
    I don't know what your problem was, but it may have been the same thing, as ear infections go away by themselves.

    <33 Jess
    I never loved you
    enough to trust you.

  7. #7
    Frequent Poster


    Has not set a "status"
     

    fins's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    375
    Dives
    100 - 199
    Photos
    43
    RiverRat,

    Nasonex to open up your sinuses?

    Just curious, did you ENT say this? The reason I'm asking is I thought nasonex, like flonase is only to block allergens, not to open sinuses.
    Mark

    ========================
    MCM from Zendiving & DecoStop

  8. #8
    ScubaBoard Contributor


    Has not set a "status"
     

    LobstaMan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    Norton, MA
    Posts
    851
    Dives
    100 - 199
    Rick:

    Your story sounds like my last water behind the ear drum experience. If there's no pain, discharge or discomfort in my ear(just an odd muffled feeling), I'll just go with it. But, if I begin to experience one or more of these symptons, I'd go to an MD.

    LobstaMan
    To alcohol! The cause of - and solution to - all life's problems!

    Homer J. Simpson

  9. #9
    Frequent Poster


    Has not set a "status"
     

    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Posts
    59
    Quote Originally Posted by fins
    RiverRat,

    Nasonex to open up your sinuses?

    Just curious, did you ENT say this? The reason I'm asking is I thought nasonex, like flonase is only to block allergens, not to open sinuses.
    The allergies cause swelling, thus blocking the sinus passages. The nasal steroids help keep the passages open. I've been using one form or another for years and started using them basicaly for diving.

    Fritz Merkel

  10. #10
    Frequent Poster


    Has not set a "status"
     

    SCUBA STEVE's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Posts
    63
    I CAN HEAR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Went back to my ENT today (TUES) and he removed the wick from my ear. Told him about the ear wash mix mentioned on here. Said that it was great, gave me a sheet with his on mix on there. I have been in severe pain since FRI., I don't want to go through this again.

Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. Blocked Ears?
    By GottaDive in forum Diving Medicine
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: October 2nd, 2006, 01:02 PM
  2. blocked ears
    By nickjb in forum Diving Medicine
    Replies: 13
    Last Post: October 2nd, 2006, 11:01 AM
  3. Inner ear always seems to be blocked
    By Dangerous Brian in forum Diving Medicine
    Replies: 9
    Last Post: March 30th, 2005, 06:35 AM
  4. r ear is blocked after diving, what can i do,
    By sambucca7 in forum Diving Medicine
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: September 20th, 2003, 11:09 PM
  5. Re: Blocked nose
    By dandan in forum Diving Medicine
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: August 7th, 2002, 08:50 AM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  






Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0