In animal models, researchers at the Wake Forest Baptist Medical Centre simultaneously infected the nose with a flu virus and a bacterium that is one of the leading causes of ear infections in children.
They found that the flu virus inflamed the nasal tissue and significantly increased both the number of bacteria and their propensity to travel through the Eustachian tube and infect the middle ear.
"However, under certain conditions those bacteria can migrate to the middle ear and cause an ear infection, and now we have a better understanding of how and why that happens," said Swords.
The bacterium used in the animal study, Streptococcus pneumonia, is known to exist in the noses of children in two phases, one relatively invasive and the other relatively benign.
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The more invasive phase is more frequently found in the infected ears of children.
"These findings suggest that a flu infection modifies the response of the immune system to this particular bacterium, enabling even the type that has previously been considered benign to infect the middle ear," Swords said.
The study was published in the journal Infection and Immunity.