Sinusitis Flashcards
Sinusitis is inflammation of the ______
sinuses
Acute sinusitis lasts ___ weeks
<4
Acute sinusitis is predominantly ____ in nature
viral
Most cases do NOT require antibiotics as 98-99.5% of infections are viral.
Most common bacterial pathogens if sinusitis is suspected to be bacterial
1
2
3
- S. Pneumoniae
- H. Influenzae
- M. catarrhalis
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
Viral
Bacterial
Viral & bacterial sinusitis have similar symptoms, but symptoms that
worsen or are prolonged (≥10 days) suggest bacterial involvement
Clinical presentation of acute bacterial sinusitis
P
O
D
S
Pain, Pressure
Obstruction
Discharge
Smell
Patients with symptoms of sinusitis lasting < 7 days should be offered _________ treatment
symptomatic relief
Patients with symptoms of sinusitis lasting > 7 days, PODS >2, mild-moderate. should be offered _______
intranasal corticosteroid
Patients with symptoms of sinusitis lasting > 7 days, PODS >2, SEVERE, should be offered _______
ANTIBIOTICS
Non-drug measures to manage sinusitis involve:
1.
2.
3.
etc
- irrigation with nasal saline
- handwashing
- warm facial compress
rest and hydration, sleep bed elevated, avoid allergen exposure
Symptom management for sinusitis involves
1.
2.
3.
- Analgesics (reduce fever and treat localized pain)
- Decongestants (Oxymetazoline, Xylometazoline) (may relieve congestion and increase sinus drainage. LIMIT TO 3 DAYS to prevent rebound HTN.
- Corticosteroids (may benefit patients with chronic or allergic sinusitis or adjunct to antibiotics if severe symptoms)
Decongestants should only be used in patients this age and above:
12
1st line antibiotic therapy for sinusitis in adults and children ?
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
Patients who are at risk of antibiotic resistance or failed initial therapy for sinusitis should be treated with ?
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)
Patients with a Type I hypersensitivity to penicillin and require treatment for bacterial sinusitis should be treated with 1 of these:
1.
2.
3.
- Doxycycline
- Clarithromycin
- Azithromycin