Peter T. Madsen is an Otolaryngologist based at South Street, Murdoch WA. He works in ear, nose and throat care, and helps people with a range of issues that can affect how you hear, breathe, and feel day to day.
In many cases, patients come in with hearing loss, including occupational hearing loss. That can be from loud noise at work, long shifts around machinery, or regular exposure to high sound levels. Peter helps sort out what might be going on and what can be done to improve comfort and hearing.
He also sees people for ear barotrauma. This often happens after flights, changes in pressure, diving, or even sudden pressure shifts. Symptoms can include pain, blocked ears, pressure feeling, and changes in hearing. Getting the cause right matters, because treatment can be different depending on what’s happening inside the ear.
Some visits are about wider medical problems too. The clinic lists care for cerebral hypoxia, as well as vasoconstriction and gigantism. These are not everyday complaints, and at times they come with other symptoms that need careful assessment. Peter’s role is to look at the head and neck area and overall ear, nose and throat connections, and then guide the next steps.
Over time, Peter has built experience working with people who feel frustrated by symptoms that won’t clear up. Ear and throat problems can hang around, and it’s common to feel worried when hearing changes, pain shows up again, or pressure-related issues keep coming back.
His approach stays practical. Appointments focus on understanding what you’re experiencing, when it started, and what makes it better or worse. From there, advice is usually about the most sensible next step—whether that’s treatment, follow-up, or referral if another service is needed.
When it comes to education and training, his work is grounded in ear, nose and throat medicine. Specific research activity and clinical trials aren’t listed here, so the focus stays on everyday clinic care and getting clear, workable outcomes for patients.