Suppr超能文献

用于清除耳垢的滴耳剂。

Ear drops for the removal of ear wax.

作者信息

Burton M J, Dorée C J

机构信息

Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, Radcliffe Infirmary, Woodstock Road, Oxford, UK, OX2 6HE.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2003(3):CD004400. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004400.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Problems attributed to the accumulation of wax (cerumen) are one of the most common reasons for people to present to their general practitioners with ear trouble (Sharp 1990). Treatment for this condition often involves use of a wax softening agent (cerumenolytic) in order to disperse the cerumen and reduce the need for syringing, or to facilitate syringing should it prove necessary, but there is no consensus on the effectiveness of the wide variety of cerumenolytics in use.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the effectiveness of ear drops (cerumenolytics) for the removal of symptomatic ear wax.

SEARCH STRATEGY

We searched the Cochrane ENT Group Register, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL, Issue 1, 2003), and MEDLINE and EMBASE up to March 2003. Reference lists of all trials were also manually searched.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We identified all randomised controlled trials (with or without blinding) in which a cerumenolytic was evaluated in comparison with either no treatment, a placebo, or other cerumenolytics in participants with hard or impacted ear wax, and in which the proportion of participants with sufficient clearance of the external canal to make further mechanical clearance unnecessary (primary outcome measure) was stated or calculable. The full text articles of all the retrieved trials of possible relevance were reviewed by the two reviewers and the inclusion criteria applied independently. Any differences in opinion about which studies to include in the review were resolved by discussion.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Trials were graded for methodological quality using the Cochrane approach. Data extraction was performed in a standardised manner by one reviewer and rechecked by the other reviewer, and where necessary investigators were contacted to obtain missing information. Meta-analysis was neither possible nor considered appropriate because of the heterogeneity of the treatments, treatment amounts and durations, trial procedures, and scoring systems. A narrative overview of the results is therefore presented.

MAIN RESULTS

Eight trials satisfied the inclusion criteria, the majority of which were of poor quality. In all, 587 participants received one of nine different cerumenolytics. One trial compared active treatments with no treatment, two trials compared active treatments with water or a saline 'placebo', and all eight trials placed two or more active treatments in head-to-head comparisons. Seven trials included syringing as a secondary treatment where necessary.Overall, results were inconclusive. One trial found a significant difference between one of three active agents (Cerumol) in comparison to no treatment, but no statistically significant difference was found between these three agents (sodium bicarbonate ear drops; Cerumol; sterile water). In two trials no statistical difference was found between the effectiveness of either sodium bicarbonate ear drops, Cerumol, Cerumenex or Colace versus a sterile water or saline 'placebo'. Three trials (from the same source) found statistically significant differences in favour of the same active agent (Exterol) in comparison to glycerol and Cerumol. Three trials found no statistically significant difference between two or more cerumenolytics (Otocerol versus Cerumol; Audax versus Earex; sodium bicarbonate ear drops versus Cerumol). Two trials comparing the same two cerumenolytics (Cerumenex versus Colace) also failed to show any significant benefit of one over the other. No serious adverse effects were reported from any of the interventions.

REVIEWER'S CONCLUSIONS: Trials to date have been heterogeneous and of poor quality, making it difficult to offer any definitive recommendations on the effectiveness of cerumenolytics for the removal of symptomatic ear wax. Future trials should be of high methodological quality, have large sample sizes, and compare both oil-based and water-based solvents with placebo and/or no treatment.

摘要

背景

因耳垢(耵聍)积聚导致的问题是人们因耳部不适前往全科医生处就诊的最常见原因之一(夏普,1990年)。针对这种情况的治疗通常需要使用耳垢软化剂,以分散耳垢并减少冲洗的必要性,或者在必要时便于进行冲洗,但对于目前使用的各种耳垢软化剂的有效性尚无共识。

目的

评估滴耳剂(耳垢软化剂)在清除有症状耳垢方面的有效性。

检索策略

我们检索了Cochrane耳鼻喉科小组登记册、Cochrane对照试验中央登记册(CENTRAL,2003年第1期)以及截至2003年3月的MEDLINE和EMBASE。还手动检索了所有试验的参考文献列表。

选择标准

我们确定了所有随机对照试验(无论是否设盲),这些试验对耳垢软化剂进行了评估,将其与未治疗、安慰剂或其他耳垢软化剂进行比较,试验对象为有硬耳垢或耵聍栓塞的参与者,且报告或可计算出外耳道清除充分、无需进一步机械清除的参与者比例(主要结局指标)。两位评审员独立审查了所有检索到的可能相关试验的全文,并应用纳入标准。关于哪些研究应纳入综述的任何意见分歧均通过讨论解决。

数据收集与分析

采用Cochrane方法对试验的方法学质量进行分级。由一位评审员以标准化方式进行数据提取,另一位评审员进行复查,必要时与研究者联系以获取缺失信息。由于治疗方法、治疗剂量和持续时间、试验程序以及评分系统的异质性,无法进行荟萃分析,因此本文给出了结果的叙述性概述。

主要结果

八项试验符合纳入标准,其中大多数质量较差。共有587名参与者接受了九种不同耳垢软化剂中的一种。一项试验将活性治疗与未治疗进行比较,两项试验将活性治疗与水或生理盐水“安慰剂”进行比较,所有八项试验都将两种或更多种活性治疗进行了直接比较。七项试验将冲洗作为必要时的次要治疗方法。总体而言,结果尚无定论。一项试验发现三种活性剂之一(Cerumol)与未治疗相比有显著差异,但这三种活性剂(碳酸氢钠滴耳剂;Cerumol;无菌水)之间未发现统计学上的显著差异。在两项试验中,碳酸氢钠滴耳剂、Cerumol、Cerumenex或Colace与无菌水或生理盐水“安慰剂”的有效性之间未发现统计学差异。三项试验(来自同一来源)发现,与甘油和Cerumol相比,同一种活性剂(Exterol)有统计学上的显著差异。三项试验发现两种或更多种耳垢软化剂之间无统计学显著差异(Otocerol与Cerumol;Audax与Earex;碳酸氢钠滴耳剂与Cerumol)。两项比较同两种耳垢软化剂(Cerumenex与Colace)的试验也未显示出其中一种相对于另一种有任何显著优势。所有干预措施均未报告严重不良反应。

评审员结论

迄今为止的试验具有异质性且质量较差,因此难以就耳垢软化剂在清除有症状耳垢方面的有效性给出任何明确建议。未来的试验应具有较高的方法学质量、较大的样本量,并将油基和水基溶剂与安慰剂和/或未治疗进行比较。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验