Finally, Presidency Admits Buhari Has Ear Infection
The Presidency has confirmed
speculations surrounding the state of health of President Muhammadu
Buhari, saying he is suffering from ear infection and will travel today
to the United Kingdom for treatment.
A statement yesterday by the Special
Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr Femi Adesina, said
the president would today proceed on a 10-day leave, which he would
spend in London.
“During the holiday, he will see an
E.N.T. specialist for a persistent ear infection,” he said, explaining:
“The president was examined by his Personal Physician and an E.N.T.
Specialist in Abuja and was treated. Both Nigerian doctors recommended
further evaluation purely as a precaution.”
Prior to the statement, reports had it that the president had an ear infection.
While there was no official
confirmation, the inability of the president to embark on public
outings as he confined himself to the State House gave credence to the
speculation.
On three recent occasions, the
president cancelled official trips within and outside the country due to
the infection and was represented at those events by Vice-President
Yemi Osinbajo.
Last weekend, the vice-president had to
represent the president in Papua New Guinea where the 8th Summit of the
African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States held.
Osinbajo also represented the president
at the 48th Ordinary Summit of Heads of State and Government of the
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) which held in Dakar,
Senegal.
The president was again unable to
travel to Lagos State to inaugurate some projects executed by Governor
Akinwunmi Ambode despite elaborate preparations to receive him, a
development that shocked many members of the All Progressives Congress
(APC) in the South-west even as he could not travel to Rivers State to
kick-start the Ogoni clean-up project.
At both occasions, he was represented by the vice-president.
Despite his health challenges, however,
the president managed to attend the Jumat service and hosted some
important visitors, including former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and
Goodluck Jonathan as well as some clergymen on Friday.
The president had been said to be having
an infection in his left ear, a disease known as “Meniere’s Disease’’, a
claim the Presidency had denied last Saturday.
But speculations persisted that Buhari
was suffering from hearing impairment and routinely complained of severe
pains and unusual sounds from that ear.
According to Wikipedia, Meniere’s
disease is a disorder of the inner ear that usually affects both hearing
and balance. It is characterised by episodes of vertigo and by
fluctuating or permanent tinnitus and hearing loss. The condition
affects people differently. It can range in intensity from being a mild
annoyance to a disabling disease.
“The condition is named after the French
physician Prosper Ménière, who in an article from 1861 described the
main symptoms and was the first to suggest a single disorder for all of
the symptoms, in the combined organ of balance and hearing in the inner
ear,’’ Wikipedia stated.
“The immediate cause of Ménière’s
disease is endolymphatic hydrops, an excess of fluid in the inner ear.
The possible causes of endolymphatic hydrops, in turn, are not well
understood. For this reason a causal treatment of endolymphatic hydrops –
and thus also for Ménière’s disease – does not exist.
“However, episodes of vertigo usually
subside as the illness progresses or stabilises, and most patients learn
to manage tinnitus and hearing loss. This even applies to patients who
are affected in both ears from some point in the course of their
lives.’’
The encyclopaedia added that Ménière’s
is characterised by recurrent episodes of vertigo, hearing loss and
tinnitus, saying though it often begins with a single symptom, the
disease gradually progresses.
It further stated: “The diagnosis of
Ménière’s disease is made only if patients complain of both episodic
vertigo and episodic sensorineural hearing loss. While these symptoms
could be related to a variety of ear-related illnesses, Ménière’s
disease is characterised by the occurrence of 2-3 symptoms at the same
time, in discrete episodes.
“Conditions with partly similar symptoms
– but no connection to Ménière’s disease – include syphilis, Cogan’s
syndrome, autoimmune inner ear disease, dysautonomia, perilymph fistula,
multiple sclerosis, acoustic neuroma, and both hypo- and
hyperthyroidism.
“Ménière’s symptoms vary. Not all
sufferers experience the same symptoms. However the classic presentation
of Ménière’s has the following three symptoms: vertigo attacks of
rotational vertigo can be severe, incapacitating, unpredictable, and
last anywhere from minutes to hours.
“Generally the vertigo lasts no longer
than 24 hours. For some, prolonged attacks can occur, lasting from
several days to several weeks, often severely incapacitating the
sufferer. This typically combines with increased tinnitus and temporary,
albeit significant, hearing loss. The hearing loss may improve once the
attack has subsided, but often becomes progressively worse and
permanent over time.’’
Tracing the cause, Wikipedia said
Ménière’s disease is linked to endolymphatic hydrops, an excess of fluid
in the inner ear, adding that the membranous labyrinth, a system of
membranes in the ear, contains a fluid called endolymph.
In Ménière’s disease, endolymph bursts from its normal channels in the ear and flows into other areas, causing damage.
“This accumulation of fluid is referred
to as hydrops. The membranes become dilated (stretched thin, like a
balloon) when pressure increases and drainage is blocked. This may be
related to swelling of the endolymphatic sac or other tissues in the
vestibular system of the inner ear, which is responsible for the body’s
sense of balance,’’ it further stated.
Credit: Thisdaylive
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