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1.
Rhinosinusitis and asthma are common conditions associated with significant morbidity and health care costs. Recent studies in adults have suggested that rhinosinusitis and asthma may be manifestations of an inflammatory process within a continuous airway rather than fully separate diseases that only act locally; and, in fact, the presence of upper airway disease may influence lower airway disease. Controlling upper airway infection, inflammation, and symptoms may improve signs and symptoms of asthma. Pediatric studies regarding this matter are few, but the impact of rhinosinusitis and asthma is still immense and significant in children. This article discusses several pediatric studies regarding medical or surgical management of sinusitis and asthma outcome. These studies show that aggressive treatment of sinusitis when present can significantly improve asthma symptoms and quality of life in children, indicating that sinusitis may play an important role in initiating or exacerbating asthma. These findings have important implications for the physician treating a child with chronic asthma.  相似文献   

2.
Rhinosinusitis and asthma are common conditions associated with significant morbidity and health care costs. Recent studies in adults have suggested that rhinosinusitis and asthma may be manifestations of an inflammatory process within a continuous airway rather than fully separate diseases that only act locally; and, in fact, the presence of upper airway disease may influence lower airway disease. Controlling upper airway infection, inflammation, and symptoms may improve signs and symptoms of asthma. Pediatric studies regarding this matter are few, but the impact of rhinosinusitis and asthma is still immense and significant in children. This article discusses several pediatric studies regarding medical or surgical management of sinusitis and asthma outcome. These studies show that aggressive treatment of sinusitis when present can significantly improve asthma symptoms and quality of life in children, indicating that sinusitis may play an important role in initiating or exacerbating asthma. These findings have important implications for the physician treating a child with chronic asthma.  相似文献   

3.
Fungal rhinosinusitis: Diagnosis and therapy   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Fungal rhinosinusitis presents in five clinicopathologic forms, each with distinct diagnostic criteria, treatment, and prognosis. The invasive forms are acute fulminant, chronic, and granulomatous ("indolent") invasive fungal sinusitis. The noninvasive forms are fungal ball ("sinus mycetoma") and allergic fungal sinusitis (AFS). AFS is the most common form of fungal rhinosinusitis. Patients with AFS are atopic to aeroallergens including the involved fungal organism, immunocompetent, have nasal polyps and chronic allergic rhinosinusitis, often produce nasal casts, and may occasionally present with proptosis from orbital extension of disease. Sinus CT shows sinus mucosal hypertrophy and often hyperattenuation of sinus contents. Diagnosis is made from surgical histopathology with or without an associated positive surgical sinus fungal culture. The histopathology shows extramucosal allergic mucin that stains positive for scattered fungal hyphae and eosinophilic-lymphocytic sinus mucosal inflammation. Bipolaris spicifera is the most common fungus cultured. The immunopathology of AFS has been shown to be analogous to allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis. Treatment requires surgery and aggressive postoperative medical management with close follow-up. Medical treatment includes allergy medications, allergen immunotherapy, and in many cases the addition of oral corticosteroids. Although medical management clearly improves patient outcomes, more studies are needed because AFS recurrence rates remain high.  相似文献   

4.
Rhinosinusitis in children   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Clinical practice guidelines for the management of acute bacterial rhinosinusitis in children were published by the American Academy of Pediatrics in 2001. Changes in the antibiotic susceptibility patterns for the common pathogens causing both acute and chronic rhinosinusitis warrant a reevaluation and update of these recommendations. In addition, there was only a very brief discussion of chronic disease in this publication, with the conclusion that the pathogenesis and management of recurrent or prolonged infection were essentially unknown. Although there are still insufficient data in the literature to develop evidence-based clinical guidelines, a careful review of recent literature and the clinical experience of experts who manage pediatric chronic sinusitis are presented in an effort to provide some specific recommendations and to offer practical treatment options. Factors associated with chronic rhinosinusitis should be addressed individually and include environmental pollution, recurrent viral upper respiratory infections, allergic and nonallergic rhinitis, ciliary dyskinesia, cystic fibrosis, immunodeficiency, gastroesophageal reflux, and anatomic abnormalities.  相似文献   

5.
Rhinosinusitis is a common disease in children that is often overlooked. The clinical symptoms of acute rhinosinusitis are nasal blockage or congestion, nasal discharge or postnasal drip (often mucopurulent), facial pain, headache, and reduction in/loss of smell. Direct vision by nasal fibroendoscopy may aid the diagnosis. Regarding imaging criteria, recent consensus documents state that plain sinus x-rays are of limited utility, and CT remains the technique of choice, particularly in children with complications or very persistent or recurrent infections that are unresponsive to medical management. Antibiotics are the primary form of medical treatment for acute bacterial rhinosinusitis, but they should be used when acute bacterial rhinosinusitis presents as persistent or severe disease. This will minimize the number of children with uncomplicated viral upper respiratory tract infections who are treated with antimicrobials. Topical corticosteroids may reduce nasal edema and improve ostial drainage and ventilation of the sinus.  相似文献   

6.
Cough and sputum are common complaints at outpatient visits. In this digest version, we provide a general overview of these two symptoms and discuss the management of acute (up to three weeks) and prolonged/chronic cough (longer than three weeks). Flowcharts are provided, along with a step-by-step explanation of their diagnosis and management. Most cases of acute cough are due to an infection. In chronic respiratory illness, a cough could be a symptom of a respiratory infection such as pulmonary tuberculosis, malignancy such as a pulmonary tumor, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic bronchitis, bronchiectasis, drug-induced lung injury, heart failure, nasal sinus disease, sinobronchial syndrome, eosinophilic sinusitis, cough variant asthma (CVA), atopic cough, chronic laryngeal allergy, gastroesophageal reflux (GER), and post-infectious cough. Antibiotics should not be prescribed for over-peak cough but can be considered for atypical infections. The exploration of a single/major cause is recommended for persistent/chronic cough. When sputum is present, a sputum smear/culture (general bacteria, mycobacteria), cytology, cell differentiation, chest computed tomography (CT), and sinus X-ray or CT should be performed. There are two types of rhinosinusitis. Conventional sinusitis and eosinophilic rhinosinusitis present primarily with neutrophilic inflammation and eosinophilic inflammation, respectively. The most common causes of dry cough include CVA, atopic cough/laryngeal allergy (chronic), GER, and post-infectious cough. In the last chapter, future challenges and perspectives are discussed. We hope that the clarification of the pathology of cough hypersensitivity syndrome will lead to further development of “pathology-specific non-specific therapeutic drugs” and provide benefits to patients with chronic refractory cough.  相似文献   

7.
Rhinosinusitis is a common health complaint that is often seen by primary care physicians and otolaryngologists in the United States. The complicated anatomy of the paranasal sinuses, as well as the multiple etiologies, contributes to the complexity that one often faces in trying to ameliorate or eradicate this disease in affected individuals. A full understanding of the fundamentals of rhinosinusitis, as well as the treatment options available for the different types, is important. It is very important for the physician to take an organized, step-by-step approach to the management of each patient with this complicated disease. As most cases of rhinosinusitis presenting to the generalist's office will be of viral origin, antibiotics should not be given unless the patient has purulent rhinorrhea or worsening symptoms lasting more than 5 days, or total symptoms lasting longer than 10 days. When medical treatment fails or is incomplete, adjunctive surgical treatment becomes an option. Generally, the symptoms that are most helped by surgery include persistent headaches, nasal obstruction, and recurrent or persistent purulent rhinorrhea unresponsive to medical management. Appropriate and timely referral for specialty care will result in the definitive management of recalcitrant rhinosinusitis when medical management alone fails or in cases where a complication or malignancy is suspected. This article reviews the current understanding of the anatomy, pathophysiology, classification, diagnosis, and potential complications of rhinosinusitis. It also describes the current approach to the treatment of both acute and chronic rhinosinusitis.  相似文献   

8.
Refractory chronic rhinosinusitis (RCRS) is defined as persistence of signs and symptoms of chronic rhinosinusitis, despite technically adequate endoscopic sinus surgery. Rather than a simple, prolonged bout of acute sinusitis, it instead appears to be secondary to an interaction of a susceptible host with the outside environment. Inflammatory responses to colonizing bacteria appear to be responsible for a significant portion of the pathophysiology. Reduction of bacterial load and inflammation of the mucosa play an important role in controlling the disease. Novel treatment strategies, with an emphasis on topical therapies, seem to offer optimal management. In this review, current concepts on the pathophysiology and current therapies available for RCRS are outlined. A practical management strategy based on the author’s personal experience draws upon these concepts, and is detailed in this review of an unusual topic.  相似文献   

9.
Objective: The occurrence of radiological sinusitis in patients with asthma without any obvious nasal symptoms could possibly increase the severity of asthma. We investigated the occurrence and impact of sinusitis on computed tomography of the paranasal sinuses (CT-PNS) in patients with asthma and/or allergic rhinitis. Effect of sinusitis on the quality of life (QoL) was also assessed. Methods: All subjects underwent spirometry with reversibility, CT-PNS, intradermal test against common aeroallergens and responded to Symptom Severity Score and Rhinosinusitis Disability Index (RSDI). Of the 216 consecutive patients, 27 had asthma without nasal symptoms (Group 1), 58 had asthma with allergic rhinitis (Group 2) and 131 had allergic rhinitis (Group 3). Thirty normal healthy controls without atopy were also included (Group 4). Results: 20/27 (74%) patients in Group 1 had sinusitis on CT-PNS. 48/58 (82%) patients in Group 2 and 88/131 (67%) patients in Group 3 had chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) as confirmed on CT-PNS. 6/30 (20%) healthy controls in Group 4 had mucosal thickening. Asthmatics with radiological sinusitis in Group 1 and with CRS in Group 2 had significantly lower FEV1, FEV1/FVC ratio, were more symptomatic and had a greater impairment of QoL. The mean sinus severity score was significantly higher in Group 2. In Group 3, sinusitis occurred significantly higher in “blockers” than “sneezers-runners” (41/79 versus 47/52, p = 0.045). Conclusions: Occurrence of radiological sinusitis on CT-PNS in asthmatics without nasal symptoms and CRS in allergic rhinitis with or without asthma increases the severity of the disease and affects the QoL.  相似文献   

10.
Persistent nonallergic rhinosinusitis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Nonallergic rhinitis is a complex of syndromes that are united by the absence of atopic, TH2 lymphocyte, immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated mechanisms. We propose a classification system based on the presence or absence of inflammatory granulocytes. Eosinophilic nonallergic rhinosinusitis may also be called chronic eosinophilic sinusitis syndromes (CESS) to help classify these disorders in which diverse mechanisms of eosinophil chemoattraction and survival predominate. Allergic fungal sinusitis, eosinophilic nasal polyps, aspirin sensitivity, and related disorders would fit in this category. Accumulation of neutrophils occurs in chronic infectious rhinosinusitis, foreign body reactions, and immunodeficiencies. More complex and variable combinations of leukocytes are found in Wegner’s granulomatosis and related syndromes, and during the evolution of viral infections. The noninflammatory disorders can be divided by mechanism into hormonal; sympathetic dysfunction (including antihypertensive adrenergic drug therapy); cholinergic rhinitis; and nociceptive syndromes with hyperalgesia and other features (eg, the nonallergic rhinitis of chronic fatigue syndrome). Therapy based on the most likely pathophysiologic mechanism is anticipated to have the most success, but requires acceptance of the wide differential diagnosis of nonallergic rhinitis and rejection of the obsolete term of “vasomotor rhinitis.”  相似文献   

11.

Purpose

Allergic fungal sinusitis is a syndrome of chronic noninvasive fungal sinusitis that results in the accumulation of eosinophil-rich allergic mucin within the paranasal sinuses. This mucin may become an expansile mass leading to complications that have not been well characterized or classified.

Methods

Inclusion criteria for this study required meeting previously published diagnostic criteria and complications greater than nasal polyps or sinusitis itself. Four patients from our cohort and 30 patients identified in a literature search formed the study group.

Results

The majority of patients had pre-existing asthma or allergic rhinitis, or both, and 37% had nasal polyps before presentation. However, 27% had no previous history of rhinosinusitis or nasal polyposis. Complications of allergic fungal sinusitis fell into discrete categories: ophthalmic (n = 13), sinobronchial allergic mycosis (n = 9), bony erosion (n = 8), cavernous venous thrombosis (n = 3), and otic involvement (n = 1).

Conclusion

Visual symptoms, proptosis, headaches, and increased nasal symptoms, especially in association with bony erosions on sinus computed tomography, suggest allergic fungal sinusitis and its complications in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis and nasal polyps. Patients with allergic fungal sinusitis may present with a complication of the disease as the first symptom. Complications may be categorized into groups that facilitate surveillance and early identification.  相似文献   

12.
Rhinosinusitis is a commonly diagnosed disease in the USA. Rhinosinusitis is classified as acute, recurrent, or chronic (with or without nasal polyps). While acute rhinosinusitis is diagnosed by history and physical examination, chronic rhinosinusitis and recurrent acute rhinosinusitis are diagnosed based on symptoms and the presence of disease on either a sinus CT scan and/or endoscopy. Management of uncomplicated acute rhinosinusitis includes analgesics, saline irrigation, and/or intranasal steroids. Antibiotics and intranasal steroids are recommended for acute bacterial rhinosinusitis. Intranasal and oral steroids with antibiotics are recommended to treat chronic rhinosinusitis although the evidence for antibiotics is weak. Biologics such as omalizumab and mepolizumab are being investigated for the treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps. Surgery may be indicated in management of refractory chronic rhinosinusitis and rarely for acute bacterial rhinosinusitis. This review discusses highlights of the updated 2014 practice parameter and up-to-date evidence from other literature sources.  相似文献   

13.
Routine childhood vaccination has affected frequency and bacteriology of acute otitis media (AOM) and acute bacterial rhinosinusitis (ABRS). Routine influenza vaccination moderately reduces AOM, and the Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine likely had a minor role in AOM and ABRS. The conjugated pneumococcal vaccine has drastically reduced invasive pneumococcal disease and caused a moderate decrease in AOM and, likely, ABRS. The vaccine serotypes of Streptococcus pneumoniae have been all but eliminated, but other serotypes have emerged as potential causes of invasive disease. Antibiotic resistance in pneumococcal disease seems to have decreased. A decrease in the overall prevalence of S. pneumoniae may have resulted in an increased incidence of Staphylococcus aureus as a pathogen in AOM and ABRS due to the concept of bacterial interference.  相似文献   

14.
The aim of this review is to assist pulmonologists in the management of diseases involving both the upper and lower respiratory tract that are linked by a common, interrelated epidemiology, clinical signs and symptoms, and inflammatory mechanism ? asthma, in particular.The document discusses the definitions of the various sinonasal phenotypes associated with asthma: allergic and non-allergic rhinitis and chronic rhinosinusitis with or without nasal polyps. Diagnostic criteria and severity levels are also listed.Particular attention has been given to the 2 main syndromes associated with asthma: (i) allergic rhinitis, the most common, and (ii) chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps, the disease most closely associated with severe asthma.To summarize, the upper respiratory tract should always be evaluated in order to achieve a single diagnosis and comprehensive treatment of the “united airway”.  相似文献   

15.
Acute rhinosinusitis in children is a common disorder that is characterized by some or all of the following symptoms: fever, rhinorrhea, nasal congestion, cough, postnasal drainage, and facial pain/headache. It often starts as an upper respiratory tract infection that is complicated by a bacterial infection in which the symptoms worsen, persist, or are particularly severe. The accurate diagnosis of acute rhinosinusitis is challenging because of the overlap of symptoms with other common diseases, heavy reliance on subjective reporting of symptoms by the parents, and difficulties related to the physical examination of the child. Antibiotics are the mainstay of treatment. There is no strong evidence for the use of ancillary therapy. Orbital and intracranial complications may occur and are best treated early and aggressively. This article reviews the diagnosis, pathophysiology, bacteriology, treatment, and complications of acute rhinosinusitis in children.  相似文献   

16.
Treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis still represents an unmet medical need. Presently, the US Food and Drug Administration has not approved any drugs for the treatment of this common condition. Various inflammatory processes are involved in the pathogenesis of chronic rhinosinusitis. Treatment of infection and surgical intervention for correction of anatomical abnormalities often are inadequate in management when singly employed. Anti-inflammatory therapy such as topical cortico-steroids and more recently long-term, low-dose macrolide therapy have been integrated into the treatment algorithm for chronic rhinosinusitis. Better classification and point-of-care identification of inflammatory features may improve choice of anti-inflammatory therapy and thus outcome.  相似文献   

17.
Treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis still represents an unmet medical need. Presently, the US Food and Drug Administration has not approved any drugs for the treatment of this common condition. Various inflammatory processes are involved in the pathogenesis of chronic rhinosinusitis. Treatment of infection and surgical intervention to correct anatomic abnormalities often are inadequate in management when singly employed. Anti-inflammatory therapy such as topical corticosteroids and more recently long-term, low-dose macrolide therapy has been integrated into the treatment algorithm for chronic rhinosinusitis. Better classification and point-of-care identification of inflammatory features may improve choice of anti-inflammatory therapy and thus outcome.  相似文献   

18.

Background

Patients with atrophic rhinosinusitis have intractable upper airway symptoms that result from loss of the normal nasal epithelium. There is no consensus on how to diagnose this condition, and diagnostic criteria are not available to perform multicenter treatment trials. We sought to establish diagnostic criteria for atrophic rhinosinusitis.

Methods

Twenty-two patients for whom there was a consensus on the diagnosis of atrophic rhinosinusitis were compared with a control group of 22 randomly selected patients with garden-variety chronic rhinosinusitis. Medical records were reviewed on all patients and clinical data were tabulated. Clinical variables included the presence of nasal obstruction, epistaxis, anosmia, purulence, crusting, chronic inflammatory disease involving the upper airway, and multiple sinus surgeries.

Results

Both groups had similar degrees of persistent nasal obstruction (82% vs 77%). The other 6 clinical features occurred more frequently in patients with atrophic rhinosinusitis than controls (P <.05). Patients with chronic rhinosinusitis and recurrent nasal purulence had a 25-fold (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.9-221.7) increased probability, those with recurrent epistaxis had a 12-fold increased probability (95% CI, 1.3-106.8), and those with 2 or more sinus surgeries had a 15-fold (95% CI, 3.5-66.7) increased probability of having atrophic rhinosinusitis. As the number of symptoms increased, there was an increasing probability of the predetermined diagnosis of atrophic rhinosinusitis (P <.05). The presence of chronic rhinosinusitis and any 2 of the 6 clinical features for 6 months or longer resulted in a sensitivity of 0.95 and specificity of 0.77 for the diagnosis of atrophic rhinosinusitis.

Conclusion

The diagnosis of the common secondary form of atrophic rhinosinusitis may be made with certainty if a patient with chronic rhinosinusitis demonstrates 2 or more clinical features for 6 months and longer. These features are patient-reported recurrent epistaxis or episodic anosmia; or physician-documented nasal purulence, nasal crusting, chronic inflammatory disease of the upper airway, or 2 or more sinus surgeries.  相似文献   

19.
Acute and chronic frontal sinusitis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
This review summarizes the recent literature published on the microbiology, diagnosis, and medical and surgical management of acute and chronic frontal sinus disease. Two retrospective studies investigated the microbiology of frontal sinusitis in patients that underwent sinus surgery. Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and Staphylococcus aureus predominated in acute infection in patients with acute frontal sinusitis, and S. aureus and anaerobic bacteria were commonly isolated in chronic sinusitis. Surgery is indicated to treat patients with acute and chronic sinusitis and their complications. Several surgical procedures were recently evaluated, and these are briefly reviewed.  相似文献   

20.
In a review of a large number of patients with inflammatory bowel disease, leukemia was observed in five patients with chronic ulcerative colitis and in two patients with Crohn's disease. In ulcerative colitis patients, there were three cases of acute myelocytic leukemia and one case each of acute lymphoblastic leukemia and chronic granulocytic leukemia. In Crohn's disease patients, there was one case each of chronic granulocytic leukemia and chronic lymphocytic leukemia associated with thrombocythemia. Sixteen other cases of leukemia have been reported to date in inflammatory bowel disease. All types of leukemia, but particularly acute myelocytic leukemia, have been described. There has been no single common feature as to type (whether ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease), extent and course, or medical and surgical treatment of the bowel disease. The relative risk of leukemia in patients with ulcerative colitis was 5.3 [95% confidence interval 1.7 to 12.3 (P<0.01)] and of acute myelocytic leukemia 11.4 [95% confidence interval 2.3 to 24.9 (P<0.01)]. Our data on patients with Crohn's disease were not sufficient to assess the statistical significance of leukemia in this disease. This study suggests that there may be an increased risk of leukemia, particularly acute myelocytic leukemia, in ulcerative colitis. The causal relationship, if any, remains undetermined.  相似文献   

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