![]() ![]() ![]() Several studies have shown that ear candles produce the same residue when burnt without ear insertion and that the residue is simply candle wax and soot. The Spokane Ear, Nose, and Throat Clinic conducted a research study in 1996 which concluded that ear candling does not produce negative pressure and was ineffective in removing wax from the ear canal. Material that appears after ear candling, sometimes alleged to be earwax and toxins, was found to be residue from the candle itself. Primary care physicians may see complications from ear candling including candle wax occlusion, local burns, and tympanic membrane perforation. However, in one trial, ear candles neither created suction nor removed wax and actually led to occlusion with candle wax in persons who previously had clean ear canals. In theory, the combination of heat and suction is supposed to remove earwax. Ear candling is a practice in which a hollow candle is inserted into the external auditory canal and lit, with the patient lying on the opposite ear. Ī 2007 paper in American Family Physician said:Įar candling also should be avoided. On this basis, we believe it can do more harm than good and we recommend that GPs discourage its use. No evidence suggests that ear candling is an effective treatment for any condition. However, its claimed mechanism of action has not been verified, no positive clinical effect has been reliably recorded, and it is associated with considerable risk. since the use of a lit candle in the proximity of a person's face would carry a high risk of causing potentially severe skin/hair burns and middle ear damage." Ī 2007 paper in the journal Canadian Family Physician concludes:Įar candling appears to be popular and is heavily advertised with claims that could seem scientific to lay people. In October 2007, US FDA issued an alert identifying ear candles (also known as ear cones or auricular candles) as "dangerous to health when used in the dosage or manner, or with the frequency or duration, prescribed, recommended, or suggested in the labeling thereof. Health Canada has determined the candles have no effect on the ear, and no health benefit instead they create risk of injury, especially when used on children. Their use should be discouraged." Īccording to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), ear candling is sometimes promoted with claims that the practice can "purify the blood" or "cure" cancer. The inescapable conclusion is that ear candles do more harm than good. Furthermore, ear candles have been associated with ear injuries. Safety and effectiveness Įdzard Ernst has published critically on the subject of ear candles, noting, "There is no data to suggest that it is effective for any condition. Medical research has shown that the practice is both dangerous and ineffective and does not functionally remove earwax or toxicants, despite product design contributing to that impression. Also, the flow of the ear cone smoke stimulates the upper respiratory system to begin its self-cleaning process.Įar Coning is very relaxing and non-invasive, and there is no heat felt in the ear canal.Ear candling, also called ear coning or thermal-auricular therapy, is a pseudoscientific alternative medicine practice claiming to improve general health and well-being by lighting one end of a hollow candle and placing the other end in the ear canal. As the smoke from the ear cone moves through the tube, the smoke’s sticky particles adhere to toxins that get carried back by the smoke to be collected in the ear cone. As you look into the top of the burning cone, you can see the smoke spirals down in the cone. It releases the toxins it accumulates through the surface of the skin, the elimination tract and through the eustachian tubes.Īs the beeswax candle/cone burns, the burnt beeswax forms a slightly tacky powdery smoke. The eustachian tube is one of the drains of the lymphatic which has the daily job of cleaning your blood. ![]() Today, German medical students are taught ear coning as a part of their medical practice.Įar coning cleans the eustachian tubes. European, Mexican Indian, and Cherokee healers continue to practice ear coning. ![]() Ear coning, also called ear candling, was used by ancient Chinese, Egyptian, Tibetan, Mayan, Aztec, and American Indian cultures. ![]()
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