0521779407-19 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:21
1352 Sinusitis
■Nasal obstruction
■Fever (variable)
■Malaise or fatigue headache
■Dental pain
■Ear pressure or fullness
■Cough
■Halitosis
■Reduced resonance of voice, or “hyponasal voice” due to inflamma-
tion in sinuses
Physical Examination
■Nasal speculum: erythema, edema, purulent discharge, nasal polyps
■Nasal endoscopy with fiberoptic scope: offers more sensitive exam
and better localization of site of involvement: erythema, edema,
purulent discharge, nasal polyps
■Oral cavity: purulent discharge sometimes visible on posterior pha-
ryngeal wall
■Facial: in acute cases, tenderness may be present over frontal or
maxillary sinuses and edema or swelling around eyes (may indicate
extension of infection and should be investigated)
■Be wary of orbital, intracranial complications (mental status
change, periorbital swelling,proptosis, visual acuity change, severe
headache, meningismus)
■Complications less common with chronic sinusitis
■Mucocele or mucopyocele can occur with chronic infection
■Rhinosinusitis Classification
➣Acute: <4 weeks often preceded by a viral URI
➣Recurrent acute 4 or more episodes/year resolution of symptoms
between episodes
➣Subacute: 4–12 weeks intermediate classification
➣Chronic: >12 weeks may have acute exacerbations
tests
Laboratory
■CBC, immunologic evaluation, blood cultures as clinically indicated
Radiography
■Uncomplicated sinusitis: coronal CT of sinuses: 3 mm cuts, bone
windows, no contrast
■If complications suspected:
➣Coronal and axial CT of sinuses and brain
➣3 mm cuts, soft tissue and bone windows, with contrast