Ear Infections
Every parent has been awakened at some
time during the night by the sound of a child crying from the agony of an ear infection. Usually, the culprit is a
very painful condition called Acute Otitis Media. The fever soars to 103 degrees or higher and fluid oozes out of
the ear.
Most pediatricians will treat an ear
infection with an antibiotic such as ampicillin or penicillin or an oral decongestant. Putting tubes in the ears
and surgery on the eardrum (myringotomy) are used in severe cases. The problem is that every one of these
treatments has negative side effects.
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Medical Treatment for Ear
Infections
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In the book How to Raise a Child
Healthy... In Spite of Your Doctor, Dr. Robert S. Mendelsohn cites a double-blind study in which 171 children
with acute otitis media were divided into four groups. The severity of the condition ranged from one ear to both
ears being infected.
The first group received myringotomy
surgery. The second group was given antibiotics. The third group was given a combination of surgery and
antibiotics, and the fourth group received no chemical or surgical treatment at all. The authors of the study found
that there was no significant difference between the four groups in terms of pain, temperature, discharge,
otoscopic appearances, or hearing loss. Furthermore, no one group suffered recurrences more than any other. In
short, recovery was about the same for every one, whether or not anything had been done.
Another study revealed that
when antibiotics are given for ear infections, especially on the first day of the onset of infection, the
disease isn't shortened by any measurable clinical standard. Antibiotics not only fail to cure the problem
but they fail to prevent recurrence as well. In fact, recurrence rates were higher in children treated with
antibiotic therapy.
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Myringotomy, a medical treatment for
ear infections
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Another common treatment for ear
infections is a Tympanotomy which is a surgical procedure that inserts a tube in the ear of a child. This operation
is so common that it is performed over 1.2 million times each year. A British study examined patients who had
received the tube in one ear but not in the other.
Researchers showed that the eardrum with the tube tended to develop a scar tissue
that had the potential of leading to future hearing loss while the untreated ear healed normally without any
problem.
Although chiropractic doesn't treat
ear infections, when a chiropractor corrects nerve interference, it often corrects the chemical imbalance, inviting
the body to respond with its own powerful immune system. An eighteen-year studynof 4,600 cases of upper respiratory
infections in a core group of one-hundred families found that when a spinal motion was restricted in the upper
neck, ear infection occured. When spinal motion was maintained or re-established, complication didn't
develop.
If you have children with ear
infections, chances are they have nerve interference, and you need to get them to a chiropractor for adjustments.
When you do this, there is a good chance you will promote a better health and also be able to avoid adverse drug
reactions, side effects, and allergic responses from medical treatments.
Reference: Rondberg, T., Chiropractic First, The
Chiropractic Journal, 1998
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