How an app can help parents detect signs of kids' ear infection - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 04:55 AM | Calgary | -17.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Health

How an app can help parents detect signs of kids' ear infection

Researchers have created a way for asmartphoneto 'hear' a warning sign of ear infections: fluid buildup behind the eardrum.

New smartphone technology can help parents determine common signs of ear infections

Dr. Randall Bly uses a phone app and a paper funnel to focus the sound and check his daughter for an ear infection. (The Associated Press)

Researchers have created a way for asmartphoneto "hear" a warning sign of ear infections fluid buildup behind the eardrum.

If it pans out, parents might one day check their tots' ears at home simply using a phoneappand "stuff you have around the house paper, tape and scissors," said one of the lead researchers, Dr.SharatRajuof the University of Washington.

This type of technology could potentially avoid needless doctor visits.- Dr. Justin Golub

Ear infections are one of the most common reasons for pediatrician visits. Even if there's no infection, fluid that builds up in the middle ear still can be painful and sometimes can muffle hearing enough to affect speech development.

Diagnosis is difficult. Usually a pediatrician will peek into the child's ear to see if the eardrum is inflamed, and parents can buy devices that use cameras to do the same thing. But ear specialists tend to use pricier, more complex tests that measure if the eardrum is pliable enough to vibrate correctly in response to sound, or is stiff from the pressure of fluid behind it.

DIYdiagnosis

A team of engineers and doctors at the University of Washington developed a simplesmartphoneapproach for acoustic testing: Cut a piece of paper, fold it into a funnel shape and tape it around the phone's microphone and speakers. Aim the funnel at the ear canal to focus sound. An experimentalappbeams in birdlike chirps, at a specific frequency. The microphone detects sound waves bouncing off the eardrum.

Theappanalyzesthat echo, a broad-spectrum vibration from a healthy eardrum. Pus or uninfected fluid alters the eardrum's mobility and changes the reflected sound. Theappsends a text saying whether it's likely that middle-ear fluid is present one piece of information, along with other symptoms, that might be used for diagnosis.

"This type of technology could potentially avoid needless doctor visits," said Dr. JustinGolub, a Columbia University ear specialist who wasn't involved with the research.Goluboften sees patients with suspected ear infections who don't actually have one. He called the tool's accuracy "quite impressive."

Researchers tested the system on 98 ears, in children older than 18 months who were about to undergo surgery at Seattle Children's Hospital. Half were having ear tubes implanted, so doctors could tell exactly how much fluid was present to compare with thesmartphoneresults. The system detected fluid as well or better than specialized acoustic testing devices, the team reported Wednesday in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

A smaller test showed similar results as young as 9 months. And in a separate experiment involving 25 kids' ears, parents used thesmartphoneto check for fluid just as well as doctors did.

Proceed with caution

"Examining ears is difficult," and better tools are needed for doctors, too, said Dr. Alejandro Hoberman, pediatrics chief at UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, who also wasn't part of the research.

But just because there's fluid present doesn't mean it's infected and Hoberman worried that at-home use of such a device "may alarm parents" and pressure doctors to prescribe unnecessary antibiotics.

Dr. Randall Bly, a University of Washington ear specialist and study co-author, says thesmartphoneapproach is a bit like using a thermometer in deciding when to call a doctor. If it finds no sign of fluid, "then you can be pretty confident the fever or whatever is probably not related to an ear infection," he explained.

But lots of children have persistent ear fluid without infections and they're supposed to be tracked for months in deciding if they need ear tubes. At-home monitoring would be easier and cheaper than repeated doctor visits just for an ear test, addedRaju, a surgical resident.

That's one reason the American Academy of Otolaryngology in 2016 called for development of at-home strategies to detect fluid buildup in the ears.

The research was funded in part by the National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health. The university filed for a patent, and the researchers are seeking Food and Drug Administration approval to sell theapp.