| If
you're considering ear surgery...
WHERE THE SURGERY
WILL BE PERFORMED
Ear surgery is usually performed as an outpatient procedure in a
hospital, a doctor's office-based surgical facility, or a freestanding
surgery center. Occasionally, your doctor may recommend that the
procedure be done as an inpatient procedure, in which case you can
plan on staying overnight in the hospital.
TYPES OF ANESTHESIA
If your child is young, your surgeon may recommend general anesthesia,
so the child will sleep through the operation. For older children
or adults, the surgeon may prefer to use local anesthesia, combined
with a sedative, so you or your child will be awake but relaxed.
THE SURGERY
Ear surgery usually takes about two to three hours, although complicated
procedures may take longer. The technique will depend on the problem.
With one of the more common techniques, the surgeon makes a small
incision in the back of the ear to expose the ear cartilage. He
or she will then sculpt the cartilage and bend it back toward the
head. Non-removable stitches may be used to help maintain the new
shape. Occasionally, the surgeon will remove a larger piece of cartilage
to provide a more natural-looking fold when the surgery is complete.
Another technique involves a similar incision in the back of the
ear. Skin is removed and stitches are used to fold the cartilage
back on itself to reshape the ear without removing cartilage.
In most cases, ear surgery
will leave a faint scar in the back of the ear that will fade with
time. Even when only one ear appears to protrude, surgery is usually
performed on both ears for a better balance.
GETTING BACK TO
NORMAL
Adults and children are usually up and around within a few hours
of surgery, although you may prefer to stay overnight in the hospital
with a child until all the effects of general anesthesia wear off.
The patient's head will
be wrapped in a bulky bandage immediately following surgery to promote
the best molding and healing. The ears may throb or ache a little
for a few days, but this can be relieved by medication.
Within a few days, the
bulky bandages will be replaced by a lighter head dressing similar
to a headband. Be sure to follow your surgeon's directions for wearing
this dressing, especially at night.
Stitches are usually removed,
or will dissolve, in about a week. Any activity in which the
ear might be bent should be avoided for a month or so. Most adults
can go back to work about five days after surgery. Children can
go back to school after seven days or so, if they're careful about
playground activity. You may want to ask your child's teacher to
keep an eye on the child for a few weeks.
OTHER EAR PROBLEMS
Besides protruding ears, there are a variety of other ear problems
that can be helped with surgery. These include: "lop ear,"
when the tip seems to fold down and forward; "cupped ear,"
which is usually a very small ear; and "shell ear," when
the curve in the outer rim, as well as the natural folds and creases,
are missing. Surgery can also improve large or stretched earlobes,
or lobes with large creases and wrinkles. Surgeons can even build
new ears for those who were born without them or who lost them through
injury. Sometimes, however, the correction can leave a scar
that's worse than the original problem. Ask your surgeon about
the effectiveness of surgery for your specific case.
MORE NATURAL-LOOKING
EARS
Most patients, young and old alike, are thrilled with the results
of ear surgery. But keep in mind, the goal is improvement, not perfection.
Don't expect both ears to match perfectly-perfect symmetry is both
unlikely and unnatural in ears. If you've discussed the procedure
and your expectations with the surgeon before the operation, chances
are, you'll be quite pleased with the result.
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