Eustachian tube dysfunction often determines whether a routine ear infection clears quickly or develops into a persistent ...
Your Eustachian tubes are located inside each ear, on the sides of your head. These tubes connect your middle ear to the back of your nose and throat. When you hear your ears pop after swallowing or ...
The eustachian tube is a canal that connects the middle ear to the nasopharynx (the upper throat and the back of the nasal cavity). It controls the pressure within the middle ear, making it equal with ...
Test batteries of the AT235 include standard tympanometry, ispsilateral and contralateral acoustic reflex and reflex decay, Eustachian tube function test (Williams test), and air conduction audiometry ...
Infections and blockages can disrupt the eustachian tubes, leading to discomfort and hearing problems. Any of these symptoms can count as eustachian tube dysfunction (ETD). The eustachian tube runs ...
The eustachian tube runs between the throat and middle ear to maintain pressure in the eardrum. In some cases, people have a patulous eustachian tube, which does not open and close as normal. This ...
The AT235 is an automatic middle ear analyzer and pure tone audiometer, ideal for diagnostic or screening evaluations. Attractively designed with a large tilt screen display, the AT235 comes standard ...
A persistent clogged or muffled feeling in the ears can be frustrating—and sometimes even concerning. Kelly Trythall, PA-C, an ear, nose, and throat specialist at University of Utah Health, explains ...