Sinusitis

Background

  • Acute (<4 weeks)
    • Acute viral
    • Acute bacterial (0.5-2% of cases)
  • Subacute (4-12 weeks)
  • Chronic (>12 weeks)
  • Other causes
    • Fungal infections
    • Allergies

Clinical Features

  • Defined as 2 or more of the following:
    • Blockage or congestion of nose
    • Facial pain or pressure
    • Hyposmia (diminished ability to smell)
    • Anterior or posterior nasal discharge lasting <12wk
  • Additional symptoms:
    • Tooth pain
    • Fever
    • Sinus pressure while bending forward to changing head position

Diagnosis

  • Consider CT only for toxic pts (to r/o complication)

DDX

  • Migraine
  • Craniofacial neoplasm
  • Foreign body retention
  • Dental caries

Treatment

  • <10 days of symptoms
    • Symptomatic treatment b/c most likely viral
      • Analgesia
      • Mechanical irrigation with buffered, hypertonic saline
      • Topical glucocorticoids
      • Topical decongestants (e.g. oxymetazoline for no more than 3d)
      • Antihistamines
      • Mucolytics
  • >10 days of symptoms OR if pt gets better and then worse again (“double sickening”)
    • Mild bacterial sinusitis (pain is mild and temperature <38.3˚C)
      • Another seven days of observation
    • Severe bacterial sinusitis (pain is moderate-severe or temperature ≥38.3˚C)
      • Consider amoxicillin
      • Consider fluoroquinolone or amoxicillin-clavulanate if pt has had abx in past 4-6wks
  • Antibiotic Failure
    • Obtain culture
    • Consider nosocomial bacterial sinusitis (e.g. after prolonged nasotracheal inbutation)
    • Consider foreign body
    • Consider fungal treatment

Complications

  • Meningitis
  • Cavernous sinus thrombosis (ethmoid/sphenoid)
  • Intracranial abscess
  • Orbital cellulitis (ethmoid)
  • Frontal bone osteomyelitis (Pott's puffy tumor)
  • Extradural or subdural empyema

References