Sinusitis Flashcards

1
Q

Sinusitis is inflammation of the ______

A

sinuses

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2
Q

Acute sinusitis lasts ___ weeks

A

<4

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3
Q

Acute sinusitis is predominantly ____ in nature

A

viral
Most cases do NOT require antibiotics as 98-99.5% of infections are viral.

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4
Q

Most common bacterial pathogens if sinusitis is suspected to be bacterial
1
2
3

A
  1. S. Pneumoniae
  2. H. Influenzae
  3. M. catarrhalis
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5
Q

Differentiation of viral and bacterial sinusitis is based on type of and duration of symptoms:
_____ infections peak at 3 days, improve in 7-10

_____ infections last > 10-12 days, or worsen after 3-4 days

A

Viral

Bacterial

Viral & bacterial sinusitis have similar symptoms, but symptoms that
worsen or are prolonged (≥10 days) suggest bacterial involvement

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6
Q

Clinical presentation of acute bacterial sinusitis
P
O
D
S

A

Pain, Pressure

Obstruction

Discharge

Smell

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7
Q

Patients with symptoms of sinusitis lasting < 7 days should be offered _________ treatment

A

symptomatic relief

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8
Q

Patients with symptoms of sinusitis lasting > 7 days, PODS >2, mild-moderate. should be offered _______

A

intranasal corticosteroid

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9
Q

Patients with symptoms of sinusitis lasting > 7 days, PODS >2, SEVERE, should be offered _______

A

ANTIBIOTICS

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10
Q

Non-drug measures to manage sinusitis involve:
1.
2.
3.
etc

A
  1. irrigation with nasal saline
  2. handwashing
  3. warm facial compress
    rest and hydration, sleep bed elevated, avoid allergen exposure
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11
Q

Symptom management for sinusitis involves
1.
2.
3.

A
  1. Analgesics (reduce fever and treat localized pain)
  2. Decongestants (Oxymetazoline, Xylometazoline) (may relieve congestion and increase sinus drainage. LIMIT TO 3 DAYS to prevent rebound HTN.
  3. Corticosteroids (may benefit patients with chronic or allergic sinusitis or adjunct to antibiotics if severe symptoms)
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12
Q

Decongestants should only be used in patients this age and above:

A

12

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13
Q

1st line antibiotic therapy for sinusitis in adults and children ?

A

HD Amoxicillin

Amoxicillin is considered the antibiotic of choice due to its efficacy, safety, low cost,
narrow spectrum, & quantity of evidence (most studied antibiotic for this indication)

Amoxicillin covers S. pneumoniae & high-dose amoxicillin (1000mg TID, or 90mg/kg/day
in children) provides coverage to most penicillin resistant S. pneumonia (PRSP) strains

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14
Q

Patients who are at risk of antibiotic resistance or failed initial therapy for sinusitis should be treated with ?

A

Amox-Clav (7:1 ratio formulation)

Amoxicillin-clavulanate provides broader coverage, including beta-lactamase positive
H. influenza & M. catarrhalis. However, clavulanate increases the risk of GI AEs. The
higher amoxicillin to clavulanate ratio with the BID dosing (7:1) ↓ the risk of moderate/
severe diarrhea vs TID (4:1)

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15
Q

Patients with a Type I hypersensitivity to penicillin and require treatment for bacterial sinusitis should be treated with 1 of these:
1.
2.
3.

A
  1. Doxycycline
  2. Clarithromycin
  3. Azithromycin
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16
Q

Duration of therapy for bacterial sinusitis:
Adults: __ to ___ days
Children ___ to ___ days

A

Adults 5-10

Children 10-14

17
Q

The following red flags require emergency referral in sinusitis :
1.
2.
3.
4. signs of meningitis
5. new neurological findings
6. extra-local infection

A
  1. severe headache
  2. altered level of concisousness
  3. swelling of eye/visual change