Home Forums Chat Forum Have we done Ear Wax Removal?

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  • Have we done Ear Wax Removal?
  • MadBillMcMad
    Full Member

    I have previously had it done professionally for the purchase of moulded ear plugs.

    I am told I need re-rodding? The sensible answer and presumably safest is to pay again but at £60+!

    I have been applying an olive oil spray to loosen it up but what to do next?

    My elbow won’t fit and I know ear buds are bad, really bad.

    Is the answer one of those water squirty things? Are they safe or do I pay up for the pros to do their thing.

    gobuchul
    Free Member

    Use almond oil not olive.

    Loosen up the wax for a couple of weeks before going to the pro.

    Don’t use any of the solutions that they sell in the chemists, they made things worse for me.

    stcolin
    Free Member

    Sodium bicarbonate worked best for me, much better than any olive oil type products. I did try one of the Otex home kits with the bulb syringe, but didn’t do anything.

    5
    doris5000
    Free Member

    pay up!  It’s your ears!  You only get one pair!

    3
    Onzadog
    Free Member

    I’m so old that I can remember a nurse at the local doctors surgery doing it with a syringe and a stainless kidney bowl under my ear. It felt lovely.

    Paid for private micro suction earlier this year and it wasn’t anywhere near as nice.

    1
    kayak23
    Full Member

    Had mine done recently at 60 quid. Took her about 3 minutes.

    Was worth it.

    1
    tomhoward
    Full Member

    I went to specsavers to have it hoovered out, but the couldn’t get it all, leaving a small bit that was blocking my ear canal, as they aren’t allowed to go so far in with the vac, so went elsewhere to have them flushed out.

    Best feeling ever.

    TiRed
    Full Member

    I’ve paid on several occasions. Work out at about 50p/week. I have very small ear canals and it is always fabulous after. It takes an age for water to clear from behind even small wax deposits in my ears. I also have very acute hearing, so really notice any blockage and pressure.

    1
    kormoran
    Free Member

    Bic pen lid. Perfect results every time

    But where does one go for syringing these days?

    doomanic
    Full Member

    Anyone tried these?

    Ear Wax Remover, Q Grips Earwax Removal-Spiral Ear Wax Removal Tool, Reusable Earwax Removal Kit Safe Ear Cleaner with 16 Pcs Soft and Flexible: Amazon.co.uk/Remover-Removal-Spiral-Reusable-Flexible-Replaceme/dp/B0DGKNGH4Y/

    1
    MadBillMcMad
    Full Member

    I know as a kid it was the bic pen lid ! I think I will be sensible, chicken out of dodgy online gear, & pay up.

    DrP
    Full Member

    Ask your GP surgery if it’s a service they offer, TBH.

    It’s non-contractural, so you can’t get upset if they don’t offer it.
    But it’s an additional service they can choose to offer and get paid for.

    DrP

    z1ppy
    Full Member

    Pay up, had mine done for £60 and it was a relevation on how much better I could hear.. I didn’t even know my coat rustled when I walked in. Very impressed with the vaccuming, so so much better than the old water syringe/power wash options. I think last time a nurse did it with the pulseing water, she gave up after removing most of it, the vaccum system has a camera, so they can see if it’s clear or not.

    6
    ossify
    Full Member

    I believe High5 energy gel is the STW earwax removal method du jour.

    J-R
    Full Member

    Just pais Specsavers their £60 this morning.  Took 3 minutes and worked perfectly. The lady recommended periodic use of olive oil to stop reoccurrence.

    One thing that seemed to cause wax buildup for me was in ear headphones.  Now I only use over ear head phones (also  a snooze band) and wax build up seems substantially reduced.  Maybe the saying about nothing in your ear smaller than your elbow applies to headphones too.

    1
    scotroutes
    Full Member

    I used the Otex Express Combi pack when I had a problem a couple of years ago. It was a regular application of the softener and then a squirt out with warm water. The first couple of squirts didn’t remove much but after a few days it resulted in a very satisfying airy feeling as a large blob detached.

    It likely has bicarb or similar in it as there would be a distinct fizzy sensation.

    I’d certainly not hesitate to use it again if the problem recurred.

    wheelsonfire1
    Full Member

    I recently removed mine by paddling my kayak into large waves in North Wales. Got smacked at one side of my swede and then the other, momentarily deaf and then had a bit of rattling about inside but later realised that I could hear a lot better!

    1
    sharkattack
    Full Member

    GT85. Smells beautiful and comes with an applicator straw.

    aphex_2k
    Free Member

    Jet wash?

    cx_monkey
    Full Member

    I use the Otex kit too. I have a thing called otitis externa which is essentially like eczema in your ears, so mine clog up regulalry. Only started using when I had a proper blockage and it did take a few sessions of letting it fizz away and then skooshing the ear out with warm water and the orange bulb thing. Now do it proactively every month or so.

    2
    jkomo
    Full Member

    The problem with the fizzy chemical ear drops (Otex and bicarbonate) is that they can turn the wax into a kind of expanding foam that covers the ear drum. Not always, but when it does it’s very hard to remove.

    andylc
    Free Member

    I’m not officially recommending this, but I have a Waterpik dental flosser. I have found it very useful for
    1) Dental flossing (obvs)
    2) cleaning out the coffee machine internals
    3) cleaning out ears (on the low setting!)

    1
    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    Your ears have a low setting?

    Onzadog
    Free Member

    Yours don’t?

    1
    slowoldman
    Full Member

    It’s one of those things you usually have to pay for these days. I’m not keen on the vacuum cleaner, I don’t think it leaves your ears feeling sparkly clean like the old syringe used to.

    I did spot in my GP practice the other day that the local ear cleaning place do free wax removal for over 70s.

    1
    Northwind
    Full Member

    I guess this is about positioning the expense as much as anything else? It’s a lot just for an earplug fitting but it’s not a lot for better hearing all of the time, which if you’re blocked up ought to be what you get.

    I can never be arsed with olive oil etc, it’s too much hassle and too slow, I can’t be bothered to do it for day after day. Otex express works the same way except much faster and more effective ime (I think the basic otex is literally just olive oil?)

    andylc
    Free Member

    I’m not officially recommending this, but I have a Waterpik dental flosser. I have found it very useful for
    1) Dental flossing (obvs)
    2) cleaning out the coffee machine internals
    3) cleaning out ears (on the low setting!)

    Yep likewise I am not recommending it but it seems to be effectively the same as the irregator they used on my at the GP last time. Though only on low power! You can also use a big syringe. WITHOUT a needle, that shouldn’t ought to need saying but I’m considering the audience ;)

    nedrapier
    Full Member

    Probably not recommended, but I’ve done mine a few times with a 100ml syringe attached to the outer of a 1ml syringe as a nozzle by a length of food grade flexy tubing and a clean bowl of clean warm water. Check the syringe doesn’t have any sticky patches in its travel that might cause stop-and-go spikes in pressure, and go steady.  Success every time. Softened with olive oil for a few days beforehand.

    I used to commute with in ear headphones and I think they pushed the ear wax in and created a build up. Less of a problem since I stopped using them.

    Also, I am not a doctor.

    Onzadog
    Free Member

    You can also use a big syringe. WITHOUT a needle,

    I’m not suggesting we kill off the stupid people but maybe we could remove some of the signs and let the problem take care of itself

    Speeder
    Full Member

    Cotton wool buds.  I don’t let it build up and I’ve got great hearing.  Can’t bare it when it builds up.

    I know in theory they’re bad but I’m not stabbing myself with them.

    pistonbroke
    Free Member

    Had mine done recently, woke up with fuzzy hearing so rang the surgery at 8am made an appointment for 11am same day, practice nurse had the obstruction out in about 10 minutes of warm water and syringing, totally cured. FOC,     did I mention I live in rural Cataluña?

    DickBarton
    Full Member

    I diy it – every 3 months – with a syringe with a very pliable rubber end that shoots water out in 4 directions. I do it in the shower and fill the syringe, tilt head and give it a squirt. Definitely works as there is wax coming out…not a huge amount now but the first twice I was impressed with the size of the stuff.

    I don’t think I had affected hearing as I don’t hear any better, but it does feel a bit more ‘airy’…

    oldnick
    Full Member

    I bought myself an old school big metal syringe like the nurse used to use.
    Olive oil for a few days, long hot shower, then go for it.

    edit: and check results with the Smartbud

    Northwind
    Full Member

    Oh yeah smartphone-compatible borescopes are now super cheap and if you own one of these and you don’t put it in your ear <at the very least> for a look there is something wrong with you.

    Onzadog
    Free Member

    I’m not suggesting we kill off the stupid people but maybe we could remove some of the signs and let the problem take care of itself

    It made me think of this
    https://i.redd.it/t1he6ehjqk061.jpg

    Yak
    Full Member

    Otex does work eventually, but I need to plug away with it for a couple of weeks usually. No idea if my ears would have self-fixed in a couple of weeks anyway though. Don’t store the little otex dropper on the same shelf as your eye drops though. Stupid mistakes etc…and Otex really stings if  you squirt it in your eye.

    onewheelgood
    Full Member

    I had mine done last week at Specsavers, having done as I was told and using olive oil drops for ten days. A couple of large lumps were extracted, but it made zero difference to my hearing.

    Caher
    Full Member

    I swim a lot so maybe something to look into then as the hammer and pen can be painful.

    IHN
    Full Member

    Anyone tried these?

    Ear Wax Remover, Q Grips Earwax Removal-Spiral Ear Wax Removal Tool, Reusable Earwax Removal Kit Safe Ear Cleaner with 16 Pcs Soft and Flexible: Amazon.co.uk/Remover-Removal-Spiral-Reusable-Flexible-Replaceme/dp/B0DGKNGH4Y/

    Yep, they’re crap

    RustyNissanPrairie
    Full Member

    My G-spot is in my ears, I love poking stuff in and having a good rummage. BIC lids and cotton buds are my faves. The wife says I have selective hearing but otherwise for 52 my hearing is still…….eh? what?

    A good female friend of my wife’s was a proper laugh and also had a G-spot in her ears (I never enquired if she had one elsewhere). We used to have wax off’s, I’d give her a cotton bud and we used to compare wax amounts with my wife gipping and vomming in the background!

    greatbeardedone
    Free Member

    This time of year, it’s best to wear on-ear headphones.

    the heat does wonders at melting anything in your ear canal.

    marshall major copies from eBay do the Bluetooth with aplomb and don’t make you look like a cyber person, as well as stopping your hat from getting blown away!

    1
    Haze
    Full Member

    Otex made things worse for me, soonest Specsaver appointment was 2 weeks off and it was driving me insane…eventually found a guy who did home visits and paid £40 for the affected side only and done that afternoon, the relief was worth every penny!

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 52 total)

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