www.englishmed.com - Home
Technical support forums
 Search
 Log In
Login with your account

Create new account
Forgot your password?
 Top 10 Exercises
 Collocations74333
 Collocations71806
 Doctor and patient vo..71785
 Multiple-Choice Quest..68444
 Look at the following..58309
 Look at the following..58166
 Words and Expressions..51330
 Diarrhoea47748
 Arrange the following..47267
 Collocations and Expr..43543
Start > Pharmacists > Resource centre > Articles > Ears Part 1

Wax in the ears is possibly the most common cause of a gradual loss of hearing but it is also a protective excretion from the lining of the ears. Patients who work in dusty jobs certainly get trouble more often. This may be partly due to particles piling up in the ear passages, but it is also because the secretion of wax actually collects dust particles.

Wax can partly block the ear channels so that soundwaves are limited in the effect, but the delicate, complicated mechanism of the middle ear can also seize up if wax gets into the works. This mechanism includes three very tiny bones which must be able to move very freely if their owner is to hear properly.

Wax is sometimes pushed on to these bones by an over-enthusiastic patient using various tools to try to get the wax out. I have even heard a patient say he uses a toothpick to clean his ears. This is dangerous and can damage the walls of the passages and allow infection to get in, as well as push the wax further along. If you think your trouble is wax go to the doctor and he or she will be able to syringe the wax out of the ear safely.

Teacher: Michael
Many articles taken from 'A word with the doctor', by Dr. John Windsor.


Exercises on this article:
Recreate this article
Reconstruct this article Irregular verbs
Articles (a, an, the) Determiners Replace missing verbs
Medical English

 Latest articles for pharmacists
Ears Part 1
Ears Part 2
Medical Jokes
Medical Jokes
Medical Jokes
Medical Jokes
Medical Jokes
Medical Jokes
Medical Joke
Medical Jokes
Medical Jokes
Medical Jokes