Ear buds
Earbuds have many uses but are deleterious when used to clean the ears. Some people are habituated in using the cotton buds to mop up water from the ears after washing their hair. The ear canal is not a straight conduit but is contorted, and hardly allows any water to stagnate after a bath or a swim. Mere dabbing with a towel with the head turned to one side, clears the water from the ears.
People using cotton buds often experience a sense of happiness, ignorant of the hazards. Generally, the buds are used to remove wax from the ears (self-cleansing) without knowing that wax eludes the buds, going deeper and deeper in the canal after each attempt and eventually landing on the eardrum. This causes acute pain, a blocked feeling within the ears and impedes the transmission of sounds causing deafness and occasional dizzy spells.
Risks of infection or hearing loss
The skin of the outer ear canal and the eardrum is very thin and delicate and easily damaged. Any small scratch, especially if a sharp needle is being used, will allow bacteria into the deeper tissues with the risk of infection. Even if the surface of the skin isn't broken, constant tickling will irritate and inflame the skin.
Neither is it good to push wax around the ear a lot. Earwax is produced by special glands in the skin in the outer part of the ear canal. It's then supposed to stay in this outer part to catch dirt, sand and other particles to stop them from reaching the eardrum. Wax is slowly moved naturally by the ear (as the skin cells move outwards from the drum) to the outer part of the ear where it rapidly becomes dry and breaks off, falling out of the ear to be replaced by fresh wax.
Earwax isn't meant to be removed by you - your body does that for you. Neither is wax meant to be pushed deeper down into the ear canal. People who continually clean their ears with a bud risk pushing wax down onto the drum where it gets stuck, requiring ear drops and complicated treatments to remove it.
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