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Discharge Instructions for Tympanoplasty

You had a procedure called tympanoplasty to fix a damaged eardrum, stop infection, and improve hearing. Here's what you need to do at home after this procedure.

Home care

  • Don't do anything that makes your ears pop. Don’t blow your nose or exhale with your nose held closed. Sneeze with your mouth open.

  • For 2 to 4 weeks or until your doctor says it is okay, avoid lifting anything that would make you strain. This may include a child, heavy grocery bags, and milk containers..

  • Do not get water in your ear for 1 to 3 months, or until your doctor says it is okay. Youcan take baths, but do not shower or get water near your ear until the packing isremoved. When you bathe, plug your ear with a cotton ball lightly coated in petroleumjelly to keep water out. Do not use plastic earplugs that go into the ear canal while youhave packing in your ear. Use only the earplugs that your doctor recommends.

  • Don't fly in a plane,swim, or scuba dive until your healthcare provider says it is OK to do so.

  • You may have a cut (incision) with a dressing over it. A dressing helps the incision heal and protects it. Your doctor will tell you how to take care of this. You may have a small amount of drainage from the ear.

  • Don't be alarmed if the skin of your outer ear is numb. This is a result of the surgery. The feeling should come back in a few months.

  • Take your medicine exactly as your healthcare provider says.

Follow-up care

  • Make follow-up appointments as directed by our staff. Your ear has special packing material in it. Parts of this material may need to be removed at specific times.

  • Ask your healthcare provider when you may go back to work. There may be special restrictions, depending upon the kind of work you do.

When to seek medical care

Call your healthcare provider right away if you have any of these:

  • You have pain that does not get better after you take pain medicine.

  • Foul-smelling drainage from the ear or the incision

  • Increased redness or swelling around the ear

  • Fever of 100.4°F (38°C) or higher, or as directed by your healthcare provider

  • Persistent headache

  • Double vision or blurred vision

  • Facial droop

Online Medical Reviewer: Melinda Murray Ratini DO
Online Medical Reviewer: Riley Holtz RN BS
Date Last Reviewed: 9/1/2025
© 2000-2025 The StayWell Company, LLC. All rights reserved. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional medical care. Always follow your healthcare professional's instructions.
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