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Cold water swimming linked to ear exostosis

Created at 6 Jun · 1:11 PM1 source
IN SHORT

Cold water swimming's rising popularity has highlighted surfer's ear, a condition where repeated cold water exposure causes bone growth in the ear canal, potentially forming stalactite-like structures and impacting hearing.

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Who's Involved

Swimmers
Individuals affected by ear exostosis
Surfers
Individuals affected by ear exostosis

↳ Why This Matters

The growing trend of cold water swimming poses a health risk, potentially leading to hearing impairment and other ear issues for participants due to the development of exostosis.

Key facts

  • Cold water swimming has seen a significant rise in popularity.
  • Repeated exposure to cold water can cause bone growth in the ear canal, known as exostosis or 'surfer's ear'.
  • This bone growth can form 'stalactites' in the ear canal.
  • The condition is common among surfers and swimmers.

The increasing popularity of cold water swimming has brought attention to a condition known as exostosis, commonly referred to as 'surfer's ear'. This condition arises from repeated exposure to cold water, which stimulates abnormal bone growth within the ear canal. Over time, these bony growths can develop into formations resembling 'stalactites', potentially leading to hearing loss and other ear-related complications for individuals frequently immersed in cold aquatic environments.

Frequently asked questions

Surfer's ear, or exostosis, is a condition where bone grows in the ear canal due to repeated exposure to cold water.

Yes, repeated exposure to cold water, including in freshwater swimming, can lead to the formation of bone growths resembling stalactites in the ear canal.

The condition is particularly common among surfers and swimmers who frequently expose themselves to cold water.

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Cadence

How It Developed

6 Jun · 12:50 PM
Freshwater swimming may lead to the formation of bone growths in the ear canal, known as exostoses.
The Independent via PiQSuite

Sources

T1
Can freshwater swimming really leave you with stalactites in your ears?m.piqsuite.com

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