Recovering from surgery
You may need to stay in hospital overnight after the operation, and you should plan to take a week or so off work.
When you get home, you'll need to keep the affected ear dry. You should be able to wash your hair after a week, provided you don't get water inside the ear. To avoid this, you can plug the ear with Vaseline-coated cotton wool.
You may be advised to avoid flying, swimming and doing strenuous activities or sports for a few weeks after surgery. At your follow-up appointment, ask when it will be safe to return to your usual activities.
Follow-up appointments
If your stitches aren't dissolvable, they may need to be removed by your practice nurse after a week or two.
Most people have a follow-up appointment in a clinic within a few weeks of the operation, when any dressings in your ear will be removed.
A cholesteatoma can come back, and you could get one in your other ear, so you'll need to attend regular follow-up appointments to monitor this.
Sometimes a second operation is needed after about a year to check for any skin cells left behind. However, MRI scans are now often used instead of surgery to check for this.
When to get medical advice after surgery
Contact your GP or your hospital ENT department if you have:
- discharge or significant bleeding from your ear or wound
- a high temperature (fever)
- severe or increasing pain
These symptoms could be a sign of a complication, such as an infection.