How should a perforated eardrum due to otitis media be treated?

The perforation of eardrum due to otitis media is mostly caused by purulent otitis media. By actively treating otitis media, perforation of femoral membrane can be treated by self-repair or surgery. Suppurative otitis media will heal the perforated eardrum on its own in some patients after the inflammation is thoroughly controlled; for those with recurrent inflammation, the ear can be washed with the medication hydrogen peroxide and levofloxacin hydrochloride ear drops, and after the infection is adequately controlled, the broken eardrum can be repaired through tympanic membrane repair surgery. In some cases, the inflammation has spread to the depth of the tympanic chamber and the mastoid process, which often erodes and damages the auditory ossicles. Selective mastoidectomy and auditory ossicle chain reconstruction surgery combined with tympanic membrane repair may be needed to remove the lesions, rebuild the structure of the sound transmitting structure, and restore the function of the middle ear. If otitis media leads to tympanic membrane perforation, it is necessary to go to the otology department of the hospital in time, and under the guidance of the doctor to actively treat, so as not to affect the hearing.