Ear Dryers for Infections

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Burnster

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Location
Glasgow, Scotland
# of dives
50 - 99
Hi,
On our last dive trip my girlfriend got a bad ear infection, thankfully it was on the last day and didnt cause any loss of dives.I have seen recently battery operated ear dryers to prevent these-anyone had any experience of them-are they better than ear drops or just an expensive gadget or gimmick.

Would appreciate any views and experience medical or otherwise


Alan
 
Burnster:
Hi,
On our last dive trip my girlfriend got a bad ear infection, thankfully it was on the last day and didnt cause any loss of dives.I have seen recently battery operated ear dryers to prevent these-anyone had any experience of them-are they better than ear drops or just an expensive gadget or gimmick.

Would appreciate any views and experience medical or otherwise


Alan

Never tried them, so I can't say. What works for me is a q-tip. Just hold it in your ear canal near the ear drum and it will wick away the water. Works like a charm and no batteries to go dead. I always keep a few in a ziplock in my save-a-dive kit. They come in handy for a number of other things too.
 
They are called the Sahara Ear Dryer
http://www.dryear.net
This is one web site.
After getting my second ear infection I am thinking about buying one
 
I am using it after the home brew (50% vinegar 50% rubbing alcohol in each ear for min. 5 minutes). Have not had an infection since then.
I think you can find a couple of threads on this forum regarding the ear dryer.
 
I've been suffering from otitis externa for years... over and over and over again... spoiling my dive vacations... keeping me out of the water for weeks in a row... till I started using home brewn "acid droplets"... 50% regular white vinegar from the kitchen, and 50% rubbing alcohol from the drugs cabinet in the bathroom...
First I dry my ears as good as I can using a regular towel or paper handkerchief, and subsequently I tilt my head to the left and put a few "acid droplets" in my right ear and keep my head in that position for a few minutes, and then I do the same thing on the other side... I keep my fingers crossed but I didn't have any otitis externa anymore since the last 600 dives or so! No batteries, no fancy stuff, just regular things anyone has at home and it costs virtually nothing!
 
When I was in La Paz in August, I decided to try the ear dryer without drops to see what would happen. 15 times in the water (12 dives and 3 snorkles), used the ear dryer each time I came out, and no ear problems at all. So, I'm pretty happy with it. It's not cheap (I paid $80 at the Long Beach Scuba Show), but it is one of the cheaper dive accessories I have.

Mike
 
Read the current issue of Alert Diver magazine, or this article from DAN:

http://www.diversalertnetwork.org/medical/articles/article.asp?articleid=48

Summary: The home brew 50-50 white vinegar-rubbing alcohol mix for 5 full minutes in each ear will do the trick with far less hassle and fewer batteries then the ear dryer. So effective it's a mandatory procedure for navy divers, who can't afford to suffer downtime from an ear infection when they're working.
 

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