Children with irregular treatment of otitis externa are at risk of recurrent fever.
Acute inflammatory reaction occurs when the external ear canal is attacked by viruses and bacteria, resulting in symptoms such as earache, swelling of the ear canal, increased secretion, ear stuffiness, fever, and general discomfort.
Most otitis externa patients can be cured after standardized drug treatment. However, if the inflammation is not well controlled or the treatment is not standardized enough in the process of treatment, the inflammation is prone to recurring or delayed into a chronic situation, encountering triggers, which can lead to an acute attack of otitis externa, and thus the patient will have recurrent fever phenomenon.
Therefore, if the diagnosis of otitis externa is confirmed, it is necessary to actively standardize the treatment under the guidance of the doctor, such as cleaning the external auditory canal, local and systemic application of antibiotics to fight infection, in order to completely eliminate the inflammation, and to avoid recurrence of the disease.