You do NOT want to put full strength H202 in your nose you will go thru the 
roof...I just lay on my side on the couch and drop a few drops in...you can 
hear it hissing and popping as it hits the germs and kills them,
deb

--- On Wed, 3/11/09, Day Sutton <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Day Sutton <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: CS>Ear Pain
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, March 11, 2009, 4:44 PM


A year or so ago someone on the list gave directions on how to get h2o2 into 
the inner ear, by lying on the bed face up with your head hanging over the side 
and dropping H2O2 into the nose until the sinuses filled up and they could hear 
the fizz when it entered the inner ear...  anyone have that posting?


On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 4:03 PM, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:




For many years, I've had one funny ear and one normal ear.  I get pain like 
swimmer's ear if I ever get water in the bad ear (a few hours later).  I now 
wear an ear plug to shower, which helps.  I used to use Swim Ear after every 
shower, but I don't think all that alcohol is good and I did get buildup of wax 
in that ear.  The very best thing that works if I get the severe pain for hours 
is something called Domeboro solution.  It used to be available with Rx, later 
I had to get it at a compounding pharmacy.  The over the counter stuff at the 
drug store isn't quite the same.  Domeboro is mostly acetic acid and so smells 
like vinegar.  It also has aluminum in it (but, of course, the doctor said not 
to be concerned because the ear drum is impermeable.)  Heat also makes the ear 
feel better.  My ear doc never could find anything wrong except for the extreme 
wax buildups and said maybe the pain was TMJ, but I know it must be some kind 
of fungus.

                                                                                                           
 Pat







I have a question, if you dont mind me asking. How did you know you have an 
abscess in your ear? My mother has been battling some kind of thing in her ear, 
she went to a ear, nose and throat specialist and they told her it was a 
fungus, but not much is helping it.

Elizabeth Williams
rite groups to meet. Check it out.



-- 
Day Sutton
[email protected]