How can you tell if your eardrum is damaged

A perforated or burst eardrum is a hole in the eardrum. It'll usually heal within a few weeks and might not need any treatment.

But it's a good idea to see your GP if you think your eardrum has burst, as it can cause problems such as ear infections.

Symptoms of a perforated eardrum

Signs of a perforated eardrum, or an ear infection caused by a perforated eardrum, include:

  • sudden hearing loss – difficult to hear anything or slightly muffled hearing
  • earache or pain in your ear
  • itching in your ear
  • clear or bloody fluid leaking from your ear
  • a high temperature
  • ringing or buzzing in your ear (tinnitus)

The symptoms will usually pass when your eardrum has healed or any infection has been treated.

When to contact your GP

Talk to your GP if:

  • you think you have a perforated eardrum
  • your symptoms are not any better after a few weeks
  • you get new symptoms such as earache, a fever, itching or fluid leaking from your ear

Your eardrum will usually heal without treatment. But a GP can check for an infection, which may need treatment. They will talk to you about how you can look after your ear.

They'll look into your ear using a small handheld torch with a magnifying lens. This should not hurt.

Things you can do if you have a perforated eardrum

Perforated eardrums do not always need to be treated. They often get better by themselves within a few weeks.

You can help relieve your symptoms by:

  • not putting anything in your ear, such as cotton buds or eardrops (unless your GP recommends them)
  • not getting water in your ear – do not go swimming and be extra careful when showering or washing your hair
  • not blowing your nose too hard, as this can damage your eardrum as it heals
  • holding a warm flannel against your ear to help reduce any pain
  • taking painkillers such as paracetamol or ibuprofen to relieve pain if you need to - do not give aspirin to children under 16

Doing these things may reduce the chances of your ear becoming infected.

Treatments for a perforated eardrum

If you have an ear infection caused by a perforated eardrum, your GP may prescribe antibiotics.

If the hole in your eardrum is big, or does not heal in a few weeks, your GP may refer you to an ear specialist. They will talk to you about having surgery to repair the perforated eardrum.

Causes of a perforated eardrum

A hole in the eardrum can be caused by:

  • an ear infection
  • an injury to the eardrum, such as a blow to your ear or putting an object like a cotton bud deep into your ear
  • changes in pressure, such as while flying or scuba diving
  • a sudden loud noise, such as an explosion

Preventing a perforated eardrum

Tips to avoid damaging your eardrum:

  • contact your GP for treatment if you have symptoms of an ear infection for more than 2 or 3 days
  • do not push anything deep into your ears, including your fingers
  • do not use cotton buds to clean your ears
  • wear suitable ear protection if you're often exposed to loud noises
  • when flying, try swallowing, yawning, chewing gum or sucking on a boiled sweet during take-off and landing

Content supplied by the NHS and adapted for Ireland by the HSE

How can you tell if your eardrum is damaged

Did you know that you can pop your eardrum and not even know it?
A ruptured eardrum sounds very serious, and sometimes it can be. But other times it can heal on its own and you will never know it happened.

What is a popped or ruptured eardrum?

Your eardrum is the oval-shaped tissue that separates your ear canal from the rest of your ear. It is located roughly in the middle of your ear, which is the reason that eardrum problems are referred to as “middle ear” infections or “middle ear” injuries. Health professionals refer to inflammation in this part of the ear as “otitis media.”

A popped eardrum is synonymous with a ruptured eardrum. A rupture is a hole or tear. A ruptured eardrum no longer separates the delicate bones and tissues inside your ear. Ruptured eardrums can result in painful infections and permanent hearing loss.

What causes a popped or ruptured eardrum?

The most common cause of popped eardrums is infection. An ear that drains all the time often has a chronic infection that causes perforation of the eardrum.

Popped eardrums can also result from an acute, short-term infection of the middle ear.

But popped eardrums can also result from blows to the ear, extreme sudden changes in air pressure (like being in a plane making an emergency landing), exposure to excessive water pressure when scuba diving or free diving, and injury to your ear with a Q-tip.

We can’t say it often enough: Never try to remove ear wax with a Q-tip swab. You can easily insert the Q-tip too deep and with too much force and pop your eardrum.

Cotton swab injuries to the eardrum tend to resolve quickly, but there is a real potential for permanent damage.

It is also important to keep children from sticking things in their ears.

Children may insert sticks, bobby pins, Tinker toys, and other small cylindrical objects into their ears and cause damage.

How can I tell if I have ruptured my eardrum?

One strong indication that you have popped your eardrum is sudden onset of pain, especially after trying to clean your ears with a Q-tip, coming up from an underwater dive, making a sudden descent of several thousand feet, or noticing blood or serum leaking from your ear.

Traumatic damage to your eardrum usually causes sudden, sharp pain that goes away quickly. Pain occurs in over 2/3 of cases, at least for a short time. Not everyone who pops an eardrum, however, experiences pain.

Sometimes, the only symptom of a ruptured eardrum is mild hearing loss. Popping an eardrum muffles your sense of hearing.

About half of people who suffer a popped eardrum develop the ringing, buzzing, or clicking in their ear, known as tinnitus.

If you also have an inner ear injury, you may experience dizziness. A spinning sensation can cause nausea and vomiting.

There can also be dizziness or vertigo for a few hours after traumatic injury to the eardrum without injuring the inner ear.

How is a popped eardrum treated?

The hearing specialists at Harbor Audiology can usually diagnose a popped eardrum from a simple, painless exam with an otoscope.

Then there will be a decision about treatment, popped eardrums can be treated with surgery, but they usually are not. That’s because surgery can also cause damage to your hearing.

You are more likely to receive treatment to prevent infection while your eardrum heals on its own.

The first step to recovery from a popped eardrum is getting a definitive diagnosis at Harbor Audiology.

Our professional audiologists offer appointments days and evenings, and also on Saturday mornings. We work with all the major insurance companies and also with the VA.

Harbor Audiology has offices in Tacoma, Gig Harbor, Silverdale, Sequim, Port Angeles, and Bainbridge Island. Request your appointment online today!

Tags: how to know if you popped your eardrum, popped your eardrum

Categorised in: Hearing Loss

How do I know if I damaged my eardrum?

Signs and symptoms of a ruptured eardrum may include:.
Ear pain that may subside quickly..
Mucuslike, pus-filled or bloody drainage from the ear..
Hearing loss..
Ringing in the ear (tinnitus).
Spinning sensation (vertigo).
Nausea or vomiting that can result from vertigo..

Will damage eardrum heal itself?

Most ruptured (perforated) eardrums heal without treatment within a few weeks. Your provider may prescribe antibiotic drops if there's evidence of infection. If the tear or hole in the eardrum doesn't heal by itself, treatment will likely involve procedures to close the tear or hole.

How long does a ruptured eardrum take to heal?

The opening in the eardrum most often heals by itself within 2 months if it is a small hole. Hearing loss will be short-term if the rupture heals completely. Rarely, other problems may occur, such as: Long-term hearing loss.