6 weeks ago DS2 had a fever. Took him to the pedi, he had an ear infection. Antibiotic #1 was given. About 2.5 weeks later at his 9 month well visit, he either still had or had another ear infection. No fever, no crankiness. Antibiotic #2 was then given. She told me to follow up 2 weeks later, which we did. Ear infection was there, and so antibiotic #3 was given along with a dallergy to dry him up. No fever, no crankiness. 2 weeks later, which brings us to today, another follow up, another ear infection (or the same one) and antibiotic #4. Plus a referral to an ENT to talk about tubes. I go back on Monday to see if its getting better and if it isn't, she is giving him antibiotics in a shot form over three days.
I don't even know where to start. I know this isn't a big deal in the grand scheme of things, but we are now talking surgery on my teeny tiny baby boy and the idea of that makes me want to cry. But pumping him full of antibiotics over and over again isn't good either.
I was going to call tomorrow to try and schedule and appt with an ENT. Those who did tubes, How many ear infections did LO have? Anything I should know? Anything I should ask the ENT about? Is this really early to be talking tubes?
DS1 had one ear infection his whole first year, and that was the only time he was on antibiotics his first year, so I have nothing to really compare this to.
Any and all advice is welcomed.

Re: Ear infections and tubes
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To this very day, I am extremely cautious about water in my ears. I hope to god that my dd needs tubes. I will absolutely be seeking a second opinion if a nte specialist recommends tubes because of my horrible experience.
I understand your concern - I was not on board with putting LO under for surgery at first. But for me, the risk of him developing speech problems and delays made the surgery appealing. Also, I didn't want to go through another cold and flu season with many ear infections. It wasn't fun for him or me.
FWIW, the surgery was really quick and easy. The hardest part was that we couldn't give DS any solid foods for like 12 hours before the surgery, and any liquids like 6 hours before. He was grumpy! They took DS from us, and I swear it was only 10 to 15 minutes later before the doctor came back and told us the surgery was over. We got to see him about 15 minutes after that. All together, he was only a part from us for about 30 minutes. He was grumpy when he woke up, but drinking some juice and then nursing helped him cheer up. After a good nap, he was back to his usual self.
I personally haven't had any experience with ear infections and tubes but I did hear about a kid that had continuous ear infections to the point where his speech was delayed because he couldn't hear very well. Take it with a grain of salt though but you might want to discuss this with your pediatrician.
DS was different in that he did not start getting ear infections until he was 5 or 6, but we eventually had to get tubes for him. The doctors just kept putting him on stronger and stronger antibiotics and as soon as he would get another cold, he would have another ear infection. His did bother him a lot and he would wake up screaming and inconsolable in the middle of the night. The tubes were a miracle - he has only had one ear infection since and it was from water getting trapped in the tubes when he was swimming a lot this summer.
I do agree w/ss265 that recurrent ear infections in young children can lead to hearing issues and therefore speech delays, so that is a good reason to try to get the ear infections under control. My DS did fail a hearing test at school and that was when the ENT finally agreed to do tubes (he was hoping DS would grow out of it since he was outside of the noral age range for ear issues).
The surgery itself takes 15 minutes or less. IMO, it is good to do it young, because your LO will not even know what is happening. My DS did have trouble coming out of the anesthesia and was really agitated for about 10 minutes or so until he was more coherent. After that he was perfectly fine.
GL!
His EI's sound like your son's. I started to write more but it was a novel and you don't care.
Honestly, we tried everything b/c my DH was averse to surgery. We did chiropractic, as we had heard that sometimes works. It really didn't make a difference for us, but it might for you.
Finally, audiologist did two sets of tympanic tests two weeks apart that proved that fluid just wasn't draining - EVER... said for DS it was like hearing everything underwater. We had noticed that his speech was behind his peers (enough to call early intervention), audiologist told us in one ear she estimated 75% hearing loss.
We did tubes almost a year ago. It's been WONDERFUL. He has had just 1 EI since. He is - on the whole - so much more "healthy." His speech is near perfect.
RE: water - our ENT (whom I love) told us not to worry about it unless he was submerging his head more than 24" ... so we stopped swimming lessons, but we still played in our pool all summer - DS was FINE. We don't do ear plugs for bath either - we don't do them at all.
My advice is to find an ENT you trust. Ours is our second. DS also has giant tonsils and the first was WAY too quick to want to remove them too. Our ENT also had on-site audiologist/testing... VERY helpful in figuring out your "breaking point" because for us it was those two tympanic test two weeks apart.
SO GLAD we did tubes, and if I had it to do over again, I'd have gotten them sooner.