Eww or eureka? An ode to earwax

Posted on Thursday, August 28, 2008 5:02 PM PT

By Dr. Billy Goldberg and Mark Leyner

In the great drama that is medicine, there are obvious villains: cancer, heart disease, trauma. And there are glorious heroes: vaccines, antibiotics, artificial hearts, etc.  It’s easy to wax poetic about such august matters. But we prefer the bit players on the medical stage – the unsung, largely forgettable conditions. Of these, nothing is as gloriously mundane as earwax.

Image: Body Odd

Earwax – or cerumen, as it’s known in the biz – is made up of keratin (the stuff of dead skin) along with fatty secretions, a mix that protects the ear canal from water and infection.

There are two types of cerumen: wet and dry. Wet cerumen, which is light or dark brown and sticky, has a relatively high concentration of lipid and pigment granules. Dry cerumen, which is grey or tan and brittle, tends to have less fat and pigment. The wet wax tends to be most frequent in Caucasians and African Americans, while the dry version is found in the ear canals of Asians and Native Americans. (We’re surprised that no enterprising screenwriter has come up with some nightmare, doomsday scenario in which the world is ultimately Balkanized into two warring camps, The Wet Cerumens and The Dry Cerumens, whose internecine battle results in the destruction of the planet.)

Speaking of Hollywood, who could help but be overwhelmed with sympathy for poor Keanu Reeves. Whereas some stars suffer the indignity of being photographed with a big rock of cocaine hanging out their noses, Keanu was recently photographed leaving the Crown Bar in Los Angles with an enormous hunk of earwax protruding from his ear. (Perhaps Keanu could have used this ancient gold earwax spoon that was found in a sunken Spanish galleon off the coast of Key West, Fla.)

But don’t judge Keanu too harshly. If he were to have gone digging for gold in his own ear, he would be violating the new national guidelines for earwax removal issued today by the American Academy of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery Foundation (AAO-HNSF).

As an ER doc, Billy has a great deal of personal experience with ear cleaning. Many people come to the ER for a good aural irrigation. In fact, approximately 12 million people a year in the U.S. seek medical care for impacted or excessive cerumen. It is surprisingly rewarding to treat these patients as they often are suffering from hearing loss, and you can’t imagine how happy someone is after you’ve unpacked their ears and they can hear clearly again.

In the ER, we don’t just reach for a cotton swap or a gold earwax spoon. Usually, we break up the plug with a cerumenolytic (wax dissolving agent) such as hydrogen peroxide, mineral oil or docusate sodium (colace), a stool softener.

But, as the new guidelines advise, don’t try this at home. Cotton-tipped swabs tend to pack the wax in and cause impaction.

Of course, none of us wants to end up like Keanu, with gunk literally falling out of our ears. So, if you need to use a Q-tip, be sure to only swab the visible, outer portion of the ear. Treat the ear canal itself like a self-cleaning oven.

The new rules also come out against ear candling, a practice in which a hollow candle is inserted into the external auditory canal and lit. The theory is that the combination of heat and suction is supposed to remove earwax. Unfortunately, candled patients often end up with more wax in the ear or even burns to their ear canals. People sometimes do the strangest things.

While we’re heartened that the AAO-HNSF has issued guidelines about earwax impaction, we’re a little perplexed about our government’s indifference to the potential exploitation of the substance, especially given our current debilitating dependence on foreign oil. Why hasn’t the Department of Energy or DARPA investigated how to turn earwax into fuel? It’s available in enormous quantities and is eminently renewable. Keanu himself could probably produce enough to light a small Midwestern city.

Many creatures excrete precious substances. Oysters produce pearls. Ants produce formic acid. Civets produce musk. Wouldn’t it be a glorious irony if the humble and oft-maligned human earwax turned out to be the great global panacea?

Comments

Can I borrow your cat?
You folks must be desperate for a news story. Earwax? Come on. How much more boring can you get?
Thinking of you
I can't believe I read this aticle. What was Ithinking?
My ears for their own reason produce excessive wax. I occasional have problems. From childhood to adult, when I do have a problem, many people often act if I don’t do good hygiene and make me feel bad. I wish the article would cover some of this, too. When I was in the Navy and went to a clinic, one smart guy, use a dental water pressure to clean my ears. The water was warm and mix with hydrogen protoxide. It works very fast, painless!!! I consider it the best fix, ever!!!   The home cure is same warm water mix and hydrogen peroxide rinse a 100 times at home, to eventual clean; same process but slower. As you soften the wax, you can go the shower and let the water run in your ears, repeat, over and over, eventually to be clean.
Proper ear care is important, but why rag on Keanu?  A better example would help.
I was told during a zoology lecture that ear wax was produced to keep insects out of the ear canal.
That it tasted bad!! Don't know how they figured that out.
never did the writer make clear why earwax is so important to our hearing and its functions. not even why we do get build up and what if anything it is a sign of. no ode, just the age ol' don't stick anything into your ear like your momma told you. this article is as insightful as the piece of earwax dripping from that actor's ear.
In 2003 I used to be kept awake with some strange noise in my left ear.  I finally went to a doctor but he told me it was temporary and not to worry about it.  The noise still lingered on.  I then went to another doctor.  He told me to have an angiogram right away.  Which I did.  Right away they sent me to Seattle for heart surgery.  I couldn't even go home to pack.  My poor husband had to go home alone and visited me the next day after my surgery.  I thought that was lucky for me.  What I was listening to was the palpitation of my heart which was so clogged up with cholesterol.
Wow,
The article seemed harmless enough to me rather than flame bait.  I used to have terrible blockages in my ears that would nearly fill the canal from the drum to the opening.  It was amazing to hear high pitched sounds after 10 years of blockage.
I use Q-Tips now but then my earwax has changed from the wet clumpy type that blocks my ears, to the dry flaky kind that doesn't (though in both cases, I produce quite an excess).  This is why I asked the question above about ear wax and it's potential as an indicator for vascular disease.  I seem to recall a study along those lines but now I can't find any discussion of it on the net.  Since determination of dry vs wet cerumen is genetic, I'm wondering how mine changed from wet to dry.  I must be mutating ;-)
Ah yes, true Democracy.  ;-)

I liked the article and for those who did not ...

It is a shame that you wasted your time by failing to exhibit the self-control to move on.  Further still, that you wasted more time to share your insight with the world.
Many moons ago, I entered a contest to write a bad poem... it seems appropriate to post it here...sadly, I didn't win.

Ode to Earwax:

How do I love my earwax? Let me count the ways.
My earwax doth save me in many an unusual situation-
when my mother doth shrieketh my name in vain,
loudly protestingeth my adoration to your pliable nature.
I love thee absolutely –– you blot out the horrible noise.
I love thee purely –– for aren’t you mine anyway?
I love thee because you taste bad and make my sister
scrunch up her face when I put you on the edge of her glass.
I don’t even mind too much if I accidentally taste you too,
for you are my bodily semi-fluid waxy stuff.
To death do us part; you last longer than a fart!
I've had the problem of the earwax not draining, thereby causing a loss of hearing due to wax buildup. When I remove it, I can hear again. I believe this happens often and people think they have lost their hearing.
When I was in my 20's and working in Switzerland, I had problems with one ear...it was like getting out of a swimming pool and having water stay in. I went to a Swiss doctor and he got out this weird contraption that was sort of like a high powered squirt gun.
Five minutes later, a ball of ear wax about the size of an M%M peanut candy came flying out of my ear. A smaller version came out of my other ear.
I suddenly felt like I could hear birds chirping 50 miles away! Mind you, that was in my 20's! Imagine what is gathering in your ears if you are older and have never had this done.
Trust me - if you even have small lapses of hearing occasionally, go have this done before it compacts and further!
Gross, yes.  Relief? 100%!
BTW, it is totally painless and only takes a few minutes!
HUH? I can't hear anything.
It is too bad that some of you don't like the humor.  It is too bad some of you think you do not need a doctor to clean out the wax.  The humor is a way to get people to read the article.  Not many people read if there are no pictures but if there is humor they are more likely to read without pictures.  I have extremely prolific cerumen glands.  Once every three years I go to an ENT doctor for the sole purpose of removing ear wax.  I can hear twice as well when I leave.  Yes.....I use Q-Tips in the interim, but not to excess and never to the point of pain (once every 4 to 6 weeks and if it hurts you've probably gone about 2mm too far).  The doctor certainly beats the method my mother used (after she trapped us in a room with no exit) - bobby pins!!!  Talk about painful.  If she can't feel the pain then she hasn't gone too far.  OUCH!!!  Go see a doctor - it works the best and is MUCH less painful.
I swear by the Ototek Loop.  It's a small plastic loop with a guard to keep it from penetrating too far into the ear.  It's an excellent way to keep the earwax from overwhelming my ear.  I've tried the drops, and unfortunately they just don't do the trick.
My BOSS, Yes, picks his ear wax out ans then eats it! SOME People are JUST NASTY!!!!
When paparazzi are as intrusive as the one who zoomed down into Keanu Reeves' ear canal, the photo would look the same for any of us.  It's ridiculous.  What's next?  Root canal?
re: Eww or eureka? An ode to earwax. Interesting that "wet wax in Caucasians and African Americans, while the dry version is found in the ear canals of Asians and Native Americans". This is yet another evidence that Native Americans migrated from Asia. Other shared traits are a green spot on tail bone of newborn and weakness in alcohol metabolism.
my nana was deaf so everybody in the family unit did not touch their ears.
i've done a web page & i need it passed on please.
he knows somebody that can turn you horse just by a nag. maybe he builds his own wax for inner protection & outter.
Why do Doctors only tell you what you shouldn't do?  How about some good quality first aid that we can use for ourselves!!!
I have wax build up about twice a year.  I use a rubber syringe, fill with very warm, not hot, water and rinse my ear.  Try to penetrate the outer edges.  Basically the same as in the Dr. office, but not as much pressure.  The wax just falls out.  It's great to hear again.  So I don't feel lop-sided, I do the other ear to get it as clean as I can.  It works great for me.
Ok Michelle......that is just gross!!! You are a little to close to your cat me thinks. By the way ear candling sounds romantic.

My 9-month-old son produces more ear wax than anyone I've ever met. If I don't clean his ears once a day (using a Q-tip, and NO, I don't dig into the ear canal!), the stuff just ends up oozing out. I know it's supposed to be beneficial, but for God's sake, we can all agree it's sticky, a little smelly, and not terribly pleasing to the eye when it's on the outside of our precious ear canals, can't we? I've used Q-tips myself since I was a child to clean my ears, going way deeper into my own ear canal than the doctors advise, and I've never had a problem, but I do worry about my little guy -- I don't want him to end up with impacted earwax. How unlovely!
There are few things in this world as rewarding as plucking out a little golden nugget from your ear(aside from popping zits, but that is a whole other article...that you should write!).  Its nice to see a little bit of mainstreaming for all of these little "gross" habits we all practice.

I myself am a Q-Tip addict and yes, I know digging around in there is asking for problems, but I can't help myself.  I had my ears irrigated once as a child but now more than 20 years later, I have yet to have the problem.

Embrace your wax!
I have always had issues with excessive ear wax (yes, disgusting..)..  More of the "plug" type.  I had tubes put in my ears, etc, when i was a kid, and I have had to have my ears irrigated.  Then, comes the master blaster... I can do it myself... Nothing better then seeing your ear wax float on by... nasty...Google master blaster; it will be your new friend.  The dude was a freak about the tip though..  DONT BREAK THE TIP ON THE MASTER BLASTER; ITS VERY SENSATIVE>>>>
Read your q-tip boxes. It says right on the box, DO NOT stick in your ear. I have found that putting a little hydrogen peroxide in the canal and then draining it back out works better than any commercial ear wax removal treatment. It's also cheaper and safer than alot of treatments.
Hysterically funny!

Gawd, I just can't stop laughing!!

:)
The author forgot to add that people with dry earwax have much fewer sweat glands, and that their smell smells a lot less because they don't have the same compounds in them. That's why Asian people sweat very little.

I have dry earwax but I am Pakistani; I think this is because I have Mughal (ie. Mongolian) ancestors. Anyway this is really fascinating to read about...would have been better with more details.
excess ear wax can be caused by the body's inability to properly digest protein, due to weaknesses in bile production as contributed to by the liver... so theoretically you can prevent excess earwax by tonifying your liver. milk thistle is good for that.


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Insights and ruminations on the strangeness of all things medical, pharmaceutical and biological.

Msnbc.com writers and editors will muse upon the wonderfully weird human body and the medical curiosities that make you go huh, ewww or ouch! Looking for informed, unhinged meditations on everything from dubious diseases to recipes for ersatz mucous? Well, this is the place.

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