The inner ear canal is the outer ear canal, and water in the outer ear canal often causes ear stuffiness, tinnitus and hearing loss. You can use sterilized cotton swabs, hair dryers, and one-legged hops on the side of the ear to push the water out. If you cannot get rid of all the fluid on your own, you need to seek medical advice from a specialist.
1. Adsorption with sterilized cotton swabs: Use appropriate sized sterilized cotton swabs and slowly insert the tip of the swab into the ear canal to adsorb the fluid when no one is near. The whole process needs to be gentle, steady and gradual, avoiding rapid and violent swab placement. The operation can be stopped when the hearing is restored, tinnitus and stuffiness disappear.
2. Hair dryer: You can gently pull the auricle, place the hair dryer in an appropriate position from the mouth of the ear canal, and use the wind and heat to dry the accumulated water. Be careful to avoid getting too close to the skin of the auricle, resulting in unnecessary burns.
3. Side-ear one-legged jumping: Turn the ear on the side where the water accumulates downward, and jump on one leg on the same side, while tapping the ear screen, so that the water can be discharged through gravity and vibration.
If none of the above methods can get the water out of the external auditory canal and relieve the symptoms, it is necessary to actively seek medical treatment and have the water sucked out by a specialist through professional equipment and instruments.