Sleeping with your ears feeling like they are blocked mainly refers to the feeling of stuffy and blocked ears. A more common clinical condition for this condition is sudden neurogenic deafness. This patient may have neurogenic deafness due to poor microcirculation in the inner ear, resulting in insufficient blood supply to the inner ear. Patients with this condition may experience hearing loss, a sense of congestion in the ear, tinnitus, and other discomfort. In this case, the ENT department routinely treats patients with a combination of nerve-nourishing and vasodilating drugs, short-term hormones, acupuncture, and hyperbaric oxygen, etc. Some patients are treated effectively, while others are not. Other diseases such as cerumen blockage in the ear canal, secretory otitis media, and other diseases may also cause congestion in the ear. Therefore, if a patient has a blocked ear, it is recommended that the patient go to the ENT department to have an electronic tympanic membrane image to check the morphology of the tympanic membrane, and then do pure tone hearing threshold and acoustic conductance resistance to roughly determine what disease may have triggered the patient’s symptoms.