Patients & CaregiversHealthcare ProfessionalsWorldwide
HomeAbout MerckProductsNewsroomInvestor RelationsCareersResearchLicensingThe Merck Manuals
THE MERCK MANUAL MEDICAL LIBRARY: The Merck Manual of Medical Information--Home Edition
Tips for better results
ABCDEFGHI
JKLMNOPQR
STUVWXYZ

Section

Subject

Topics

Temporal Bone Fracture

Pronunciations

The temporal bone (the skull bone containing part of the ear canal, the middle ear, and the inner ear) can be fractured by a blow to the head.

Temporal bone fractures frequently rupture the eardrum and may also damage the ossicles (the chain of small bones that connects the eardrum to the inner ear) and the cochlea (the organ of hearing).

Symptoms include facial paralysis on the side of the fracture and profound hearing loss, which may be conductive, sensorineural, or both (see Hearing Loss and Deafness: Causes of Hearing LossSidebar). People may have bleeding from the ear, blood behind the eardrum, or patchy bruising of the skin behind the ear. Sometimes, cerebrospinal fluid leaks from the brain through the fracture and appears as clear fluid draining from the ear or nose. Leakage of this fluid indicates that the brain is exposed to infection.

Diagnosis is made with computed tomography (CT). Treatment usually requires an antibiotic given intravenously to prevent infection of the tissues covering the brain (meningitis). Sometimes, persistent facial paralysis caused by pressure on the facial nerve can be relieved by surgery. Damage to the eardrum and structures of the middle ear is repaired surgically weeks or months later if necessary.

Last full review/revision February 2008 by Richard T. Miyamoto, MD

Back to Top

Previous: Otitis Media (Secretory)

Next: Tinnitus

Audio
Figures
Photographs
Pronunciations
Tables
Videos
Contact UsSite MapAccessibility StatementPrivacy PolicyTerms of UseCopyright 1995-2009 Merck & Co., Inc.