Don't fall on deaf ears about this earache advice. With these home remedies, you can feel your best.
July 29, 2015
Don't fall on deaf ears about this earache advice. With these home remedies, you can feel your best.
Heat and medicinal plants are the traditional mainstays for treating earwax and earaches naturally. Home medicine also offers useful advice to combat annoying ringing or roaring in the ears, and alleviate discomfort.
If you're susceptible to earaches, don't leave the house in cold weather without a protective hat or scarf, or at least a little cotton in your ears. When swimming, wear a bathing cap or don wax or silicone earplugs to avoid getting water in your ears. Consult a doctor immediately if your child has an earache, or if an adult's earache does not respond to home treatment within a short time.
The purpose of earwax is to protect your eardrums, keep the skin moist and guard against dust and other particles. Normally the ear cleans itself, but sometimes wax builds up in your auditory canal and hardens into a plug. If water gets in, it will swell up and may partially or completely block your auditory canal.
Important note: Removal of a wax plug should be left to medical professionals — under no circumstances should you try to remove an earplug by inserting any kind of object into your ear. Try these remedies to help the earwax plug soften and be released.
Don't use cotton swabs to clean your ears — they merely push the wax in deeper. Inserting a plastic syringe filled with fluid into your ear can injure your eardrum, so get a doctor to do it if you feel it's necessary. The same is true of using ear candles to cleanse your ear canal.
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