| Literature DB >> 35071032 |
Tal Marom1, Jacob Pitaro2, Udayan K Shah3,4, Sara Torretta5,6, Paola Marchisio7,8, Ayan T Kumar9, Patrick C Barth4,10, Sharon Ovnat Tamir1.
Abstract
The global coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has changed the prevalence and management of many pediatric infectious diseases, including acute otitis media (AOM). Coronaviruses are a group of RNA viruses that cause respiratory tract infections in humans. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, coronavirus serotypes OC43, 229E, HKU1, and NL63 were infrequently detected in middle ear fluid (MEF) specimens and nasopharyngeal aspirates in children with AOM during the 1990s and 2000s and were associated with a mild course of the disease. At times when CoV was detected in OM cases, the overall viral load was relatively low. The new severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) is the causative pathogen responsible for the eruption of the COVID-19 global pandemic. Following the pandemic declaration in many countries and by the World Health Organization in March 2020, preventive proactive measures were imposed to limit COVID-19. These included social distancing; lockdowns; closure of workplaces; kindergartens and schools; increased hygiene; use of antiseptics and alcohol-based gels; frequent temperature measurements and wearing masks. These measures were not the only ones taken, as hospitals and clinics tried to minimize treating non-urgent medical referrals such as OM, and elective surgical procedures were canceled, such as ventilating tube insertion (VTI). These changes and regulations altered the way OM is practiced during the COVID-19 pandemic. Advents in technology allowed a vast use of telemedicine technologies for OM, however, the accuracy of AOM diagnosis in those encounters was in doubt, and antibiotic prescription rates were still reported to be high. There was an overall decrease in AOM episodes and admissions rates and with high spontaneous resolution rates of MEF in children, and a reduction in VTI surgeries. Despite an initial fear regarding viral shedding during myringotomy, the procedure was shown to be safe. Special draping techniques for otologic surgery were suggested. Other aspects of OM practice included the presentation of adult patients with AOM who tested positive for SARS-2-CoV and its detection in MEF samples in living patients and in the mucosa of the middle ear and mastoid in post-mortem specimens.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; acute otitis media; admission; burden analysis; coronavirus infection; mastoiditis; otitis media; otitis media with effusion
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35071032 PMCID: PMC8777025 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.749911
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
CoV detection in AOM cases.
| Country | Year | Age | No. of Children | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Finland ( | 1998 | 3m-7y | 69 | CoV RNA was detected in both MEF and NPA in 5 (5%), in MEF alone in 2 (2%), and in NPA alone in 9 (10%). RSV and HCV were detected in 1 NPA sample. |
| Finland ( | 2000 | 2-24m | 329 | In confirmed AOM cases: 13 NPA CoV+, but no CoV+ MEF specimens. |
| France ( | 2005 | <20y | 300 | Of the 28/300 patients that had NPA CoV+, 28% had AOM. |
| Turkey ( | 2006 | 6-144m | 120 | 5/42 pure viral cases had MEF CoV+. |
| Finland ( | 2006 | 7-71m | 79 | MEF collected from children with otorrhea from TTs: 1 |
| USA ( | 2008 | 6m-3y | 294 | 50% CoV+ detection rate in 440 AOM episodes. |
| Australia ( | 2011 | 6-36m | 180 | 14.4% NPA and 4.9% MEF samples were CoV+. |
| The Netherlands ( | 2012 | <5y | 116 | MEF collected from children during TT surgery: 4/116 (3%) were CoV+. |
AOM, acute otitis media; MEF, middle ear fluid; NPA, nasopharyngeal aspirate; CoV, coronavirus; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus, TT, tympanostomy tube.
Reduction in otitis media burden during COVID-19 pandemic.
| Country | Setting | COVID-19 Period | Comparative Period(s) | Variable | Rate Difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Finland ( | Two hospitals | 16/3/2020-12/4/2020 | 17/2/2020-15/3/2020 | No. of AOM visits | -1%, -30% |
| USA ( | 27 pediatric hospitals | 15/3/2020-31/8/2020 | 15/3/2017-31/8/2017; 15/4/2018-31/8/2018; | Diseases of the ear and mastoid process | -68% |
| 15/4/2019-31/8/2019 | |||||
| France ( | 6 Paris area hospitals | 18/3/2020-19/4/2020 | 1/1/2017-17/3/2020 | No. AOM referrals | -70% |
| (Time interrupted) | |||||
| Spain ( | Tertiary pediatric hospital | 1/1/2020-30/6/2020 | 1/1/2010-31/12/2019 | No. of mastoiditis cases | +45% |
| (Time interrupted) | |||||
| Italy ( | Telephone/telemedicine contact with families of children with OM | 1/2/2020-30/4/2020 | 1/2/2019-30/4/2019 | No of AOM episodes, | -81% |
| No. of otorrhea episodes, | -97% | ||||
| No. of ABx/month | -89% | ||||
| USA ( | Tertiary and community health providers | 1/1/2020-13/3/2020; | 1/1/2019-13/3/2019; | No. of tympanostomy tube procedures | -64% |
| 1/6/2020-13/12/2020 | 1/6/2019-13/12/2019 | ||||
| (post-lockdown) | |||||
| Italy ( | Tertiary pediatric hospital | 1/5/2020-30/6/2020 | 1/5/2019-30/6/2019; | No. of children with OME, | -40% |
| (post-lockdown) | 1/1/2020-29/2/2020; | No. of children with type B tympanometry | -95% | ||
| The Netherlands ( | Tertiary hospital and clinics network | 1/3/2020-31/5/2020 | 1/3/2019-31/5/2019 | No. of AOM episodes | -10% |
| USA ( | 37 Children’s hospitals | 1/1/20-31/12/20 | 1/1 to 31/12 for each year: 2010-2019 | No. of AOM visits | -55% |
| Italy ( | Pediatric emergency Department | 21/2/2020-4/5/2020 | 1/2/2019-21/2/2020 | No. of AOM visits | -92% |
| Germany ( | 146 ENT practice centers | Q2-Q3 2020 | Q2-Q3 2019 | No. of AOM visits | -43% |
| UK ( | One large center | 17/3/2020-17/6/2020 | 17/3/2019-17/3/2019 | No. of emergency department OM visits | -86% |
| Italy ( | Telephone/telemedicine contact with families of children with OM | 9/3/2020-19/5/2020 | 1/2/2020-30/4/2020 | No. of AOM episodes | -90% |
| UK ( | 3 secondary care ENT departments | 1/3/2020-28/2/2021 | 1/3/2019-29/2/2020 | No. of AOM visits | -26.9% |
| No. of acute mastoiditis cases | -14.3% | ||||
| The Netherlands ( | Julius General Practitioners’ Network | 1/3/2020-28/2/2021 | 1/3/2019-29/2/2020 | AOM, 0-2 years | -47.6% |
| AOM, 2-6 years | -33.7% | ||||
| AOM, 6-12 years | -6.8% | ||||
| Switzerland ( | Tertiary referral center | 16/3/2020-26/4/2020 | 16/3/2019-26/4/2019 | AOM, all ages | -79.5% |
AOM, acute otitis media; MEF, middle ear fluid, ABx, antibiotics; OM, otitis media.
Draping techniques during otologic surgery.
| Author | Drape “tent” (Other than Otological Surgical Drape/4K 3D Exoscope Drape) | Accessories | A place for Surgical Assistant and Instrument Table | Ease of Construction (Yes/No) | Cost | Name of Installation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Steri-Drape (3M) | Gottingen laser support table | + | Y | + | |
|
| C-arm draping | – | – | N | ++ | |
| ( | Modified chair drape | – | – | Y | + | |
|
| Steri-Drape (3M) | – | – | Y | + | Ototent 1 |
|
| Modified Zeiss OPMI microscope drape (Carl Zeiss, Meditec AG, Germany) | – | – | Y | ++ | Ototent 2 |
|
| Modified Zeiss OPMI microscope drape (Carl Zeiss, Meditec AG, Germany) | PVC pipes as a specialized frame, | – | N | ++ |
|
| Sterile bags | ||||||
|
| A plastic sterile drape (3M Steri-Drape 1015) | – | – | Y | + | |
|
|
| ‘L’ support | – | Y | + |
+, not expensive; ++, expensive.
Figure 1Medical assistant telemedicine in use. A physician provider to the far right is watching the medical assistant at the far left on the screen using a device to examine the ear of a patient. The device will relay images of the patient’s ear exam to the physician (Photo used with permission of A. Saporito. Image courtesy of Dr. Patrick Barth).
Figure 3Otoscopy via telemedicine. The camera is at top of the monitor.