Sinusitis Flashcards
Sinusitis - common pathogens
Strep pneumo (30-40%) gr+ cocci
H. Influenza (20-30%) gr - bacilli
Moraxella gr- cocci
(Similar to OM and pharyngitis)
strep pyogenes and viruses
Sinusitis - clinical presentation/indicators for abx
Persistent >10 days without improvement
or
Severe s/s with high fever, purulent discharge, facial pain x 3-4 days
or
“double sickening” - was a viral URI, now new onset fever
Sinusitis treatment plan
- Symptomatic relief: analgesics, nasal irrigation.
- Restore/improve sinus function. Consider decongestants.
- Abx
- Consider intranasal steroids (in allergic rhinitis patients)
Why are antihistamines generally not recommended in sinusitis?
Dries up secretions/increases viscosity.
If a pt with sinusitis improves after 3-5 days of antibiotics, how long do you continue therapy?
5-7 days if 1st line therapy or 7-10 days if 2nd line therapy
If a pt with sinusitis worsens in 48-72 hours or does not improve after 3-5 days of antibiotics, what is your next action?
Broaden coverage or switch to another class
After broadening coverage or changing classes for a patient that is not improving (sinusitis), what is your next action?
CT scan or MRI
Sinusitis - DOC
AMX-CLA
If PCN sensitive, Doxycycline or Macrolid (Azithro or Clarithro)
Why are macrolides not recommended as empiric therapy for bacterial sinusitis?
High rate of resistance for strep pneumo (30%)
Should Intranasal steroids be started as an adjunct to abx for sinusitis?
Yes, if history of allergic rhinitis.
Compare Tx of OM - Pharyngitis - Sinusitis
Similar
OM and pharyngitis are AMX
Sinusitis is a little more serious b/c close to brain so step it up - Augmentin