Shaking head to free water in ears may cause brain damage in kids
(STUDY FINDS) -- SEATTLE — There are few sensations quite as frustrating as knowing there is just a little bit of water stuck in your ear canal that refuses to come out. It’s happened to the best of us at one point or another after a dip in the pool or particularly long shower. Of course, one’s natural reaction may be to immediately start shaking their head violently in an attempt to force the water out, most of the time to middling results. Regardless of the strategy’s effectiveness, a new study warns this approach can actually lead to brain damage in small children.
Researchers from both Cornell University and Virginia Tech constructed various 3D printed ear canals of differing sizes, to represent age groups, and filled each with water. Then varying levels of acceleration were tested out on each model in order to gauge how much force of gravity is usually needed to eject water from the ear canal.
“Our research mainly focuses on the acceleration required to get the water out of the ear canal,” says study author Anuj Baskota, of Cornell University, in a media release. “The critical acceleration that we obtained experimentally on glass tubes and 3D printed ear canals was around the range of 10 times the force of gravity for infant ear sizes, which could cause damage to the brain.”
The post Shaking head to free water in ears may cause brain damage in kids appeared first on WND.