RED part 2 Flashcards
What is sinusitis
Sinusitis is inflammation of the paranasal sinuses.
Acute sinusitis can last up to four weeks, subacute sinusitis lasts between 1 to 3 months, and chronic sinusitis lasts more than 3 months.
What are most cases of sinusitis?
acute- result of a viral infection.
Pathophysiology of sinusitis
invading pathogen often causes an inflammatory response > causes goblet cells to over secrete mucus + leads to congestion >
At same time immune cells try to fight off these pathogens which creates pus
What is pus
mixture of pathogens, immune cells, and dead tissue.
Viral pathogens of sinusitis
- rhinovirus
- parainfluenza virus
- influenza virus
Bacterial pathogens of sinusitis
- streptococcus pneumoniae
- haemophilus influenzae
- moraxella catarrhalis
- staphylococcus aureus
What is chronic hyperplastic sinusitis caused by?
Allergies leading to hyperplasia of the connective tissues of the sinuses. This can give rise to nasal polyps.
Clinical manifestations of sinusitis
- Facial pain
- Headache
- Fever
- Voice changes
- Change in smell and taste
Investigations for sinusitis
- Diagnosis is mainly based on clinical presentation
- Rhinoscopy
- Sinus culture
- MRI sinuses
Management of sinusitis
- Sinusitis usually last 2-3 weeks and resolves without treatment
- High dose steroid nasal spray: if no improvement
Antibiotics for sinusitis if bacterial cause
- First line: penicillin V (phenoxymethylpenicillin) for a 5 day course
- Second line: co-amoxiclav
- If penicillin allergy: clarithromycin, erythromycin (pregnancy), doxycycline
What is epiglottitis
Epiglottitis refers to inflammation and localised oedema of the epiglottis, which can result in potentially life-threatening airway obstruction
Epidemiology of epiglottitis
- More commonly occurs in children
- M>F
RFs for epiglottitis
- Male gender
- Unvaccinated
- Immunocompromised
- Age - 6-23
What does the epiglottis do?
Epiglottis prevents food from entering trachea, when eating. Other times, it remains open to allow air flow to trachea.