Doctors often make their most preliminary judgment based on the patient’s complaints, so the symptoms of the disease you provide are important. Patients should describe briefly and to the point the symptoms of the ear, i.e., the main symptoms of ear discomfort, as well as the time when these symptoms occurred, what specialty tests were done before the visit and the appropriate treatment. Common ear symptoms include ear pain, hearing loss, tinnitus, and purulent discharge from the external ear canal. When describing ear pain, you should tell the doctor whether there is a history of colds, airplane rides and trauma before the ear pain; whether the hearing loss is sudden or gradual, whether it is accompanied by tinnitus and vertigo, whether there is a history of genetic disease, whether you are using ototoxic medications, etc.; the duration, nature and tone of the tinnitus, whether it is in sync with the pulse rate, etc.; the amount and shape of the pus-filled secretion from the external ear canal (e.g., purulent, bloody), whether it has a bad smell, whether there is facial paralysis, fever, headache, or whether there are any symptoms of ear pain. There is facial paralysis, fever, headache, and nausea and vomiting. Whether the vertigo is rotational, history of cervical spondylosis, whether it is related to head movement, whether it is traumatic, and history of cardiovascular disease. When the mass appeared in or around the ear, how fast it grew, and whether it was painful. Also, bring information from previous visits such as hearing and CT results original information.