PPT - UCLA Head and Neck Surgery
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Transcript PPT - UCLA Head and Neck Surgery
Marilene B. Wang, MD, FACS
Professor
UCLA Division of Head Neck Surgery
Chief of Otolaryngology
VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System
From
Anterior Nasal Spine
◦ To Sphenoid Ostium 7 cm
◦ To Pituitary Fossa8.5 cm
Middle
turbinate
Lamina papyracea
Ethmoid fovea
Cribriform plate
Sphenoid
Facial
pain/pressure
Nasal obstruction/blockage
Nasal
discharge/purulence/discolo
red postnasal drip
Hyposmia/anosmia
Purulence
in nasal cavity on
examination
Fever (acute rhinosinusitis
only)
Headache
Fever
Halitosis
Fatigue
Dental
Cough
Ear
pain
pain/pressure/fullness
Acute
Subacute
Chronic
Recurrent,
acute
Acute exacerbations of
chronic
Duration
up to 4 weeks
> 2 major factors
1 major factor + 2 minor
factors
Nasal purulence on exam
Duration
4-12 weeks
>2 major factors
1 major factor + 2 minor
factors, or nasal purulence on
exam
Complete resolution after
effective medical therapy
Duration
> 12 weeks
History same as for subacute
Facial pain does not constitute
suggestive history in absence of
other nasal symptoms or signs
>4
episodes/year + each
episode last >7-10 days.
Absence of intervening signs
of chronic rhinosinusitis
Sudden
worsening of chronic
rhinosinusitis
Return to baseline after
treatment
Allergies
Immunodeficiency
Genetic/congenital
Endocrine
Neuromechanism
Anatomic
Neoplastic
Acquired
mucociliary
dysfunction
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Microorganisms—viral,
bacterial, fungal
Noxious chemicals, pollutants,
smoke
Medications
Trauma
Surgery
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S. pneum (20-43%)
H. influenzae (22-35%)
Strep spp. (3-9%)
Anaerobes (0-9%)
M. catarrhalis (2-10%)
S. aureus (0-8%)
Other (4%)
S.
pneum (25-30%)
H. influenzae (15-20%)
M. catarrhalis (15-20%)
S. pyogenes (2-5%)
Anaerobes (2-5%)
Sterile (20-35%)
Mild
disease with no recent
antimicrobial use
Augmentin, Amoxicillin
Vantin
Ceclor
Omnicef
Tequin,
Levaquin, Avelox
Augmentin
Combination (Amox or
clinda + Suprax)
Bactrim
Doxycycline
Zithromax,
Biaxin,
Erythromycin
Switch to quinolone if no
improvement in 72 hours
Quinolone
Augmentin
Clindamcin
+ rifampin
Consider IV abx
Augmentin,
Amoxicillin
Vantin
Ceclor
Omnicef
Switch
if no improvement after
72 hours
Bactrim
Macrolide
Augmentin
Rocephin
Bactrim,
macrolide
Consider IV abx if no
improvement
Afrin
for 3 days
Normal saline sprays
Decongestants
Antihistamines
?Steroids
Periorbital
cellulitis
Preseptal cellulitis/abscess
Orbital cellulitis
Orbital abscess
Cavernous sinus thrombosis
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Widespread affliction—the most
common allergic disease
Affects 10-30% of American
adults—
>20 million people, adults and
children
Results in missed work and school
days, poor quality of life
Allergic
Shiners
Itchy,
salute
red conjunctiva
Sneezing
Post-nasal drip, rhinorrhea,
congestion
Dust
Mold,
Plants
mildew
Animal
dander
Feathers/down
Pollen
Smog
Trees,
grasses, weeds
Dust, fertilizer, chemicals
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Asthma
Allergic fungal sinusitis
Cystic fibrosis
Mucociliary dysfunction
Connective tissue disorders
(Wegener’s granulomatosis,
sarcoid)
Nasal
polyposis
Samter’s triad (aspirin
sensitivity, nasal polyps,
asthma)
Cocaine use
Antibiotics
Antihistamines
Nasal
steroids
Normal saline irrigations
Allergy evaluation +/immunotherapy
Sinus
CT scan
Consider anatomic factors—
septal deviation, nasal
polyps, concha bullosa,
ostio-meatal blockage
Nasal
polyposis
Anatomic blockage—deviated
septum, enlarged turbinate,
concha bullosa
Mucocele
Orbital abscess
Fungal
sinusitis—allergic vs.
invasive (mucor)
Tumor of nasal cavity or
sinus
Chronic,
recurrent sinusitis
Failure to respond to
maximal medical therapy
Obtain cultures
Nasal
congestion
Headache/sinus pain
Fatigue
Prolonged bleeding/crusting
Breach
of lamina papyracea—
damage to extraocular muscles,
periorbital ecchymoses
Damage to optic nerve—
blindness
Breach of cribriform—CSF leak
Meningitis
May
be a lifelong disease
Allergy control—
antiihistamines, nasal steroids,
immunotherapy
Oral steroids—judiciously
Antibiotics for acute
exacerbations
Environmental
control—avoid
carpet, damp, mold, older
homes, smog
Saline irrigations
Alternative
therapies—
acupuncture, stress management,
herbal remedies
Pain management
Multi-disciplinary effort—work
with allergy, infectious disease,
neurology/pain management
services
4
types of allergic reactions (Gell
and Coombs)
Type 1 – IgE
Type 2 - IgG--antigen
Type 3 – Immune complex
Type 4 – Delayed hypersensitivity
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Mast cells bind IgE via their Fc(ε)
receptors
Mast cell degranulates and releases
mediators--produce allergic reactions
Hypersensitivity usually appears on
repeated contact with the allergen.
Examples of type I allergic reactions
–Anaphylaxis, atopic asthma, atopic
eczema, drug allergy, hay fever
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Antibody (IgG or IgM) directed against
antigen on an individual's own cells, or
against foreign antibody (after blood
transfusion)
Cytotoxic action by killer cells, or to lysis
mediated by the complement system.
– Autoimmune hemolytic anemia, Goodpasture's
syndrome, hemolytic disese of the newborn,
myasthenia gravis, pemphigus
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Immune complexes (antigen and usually
IgG or IgM) deposited in the tissue
Complement is activated and
polymorphonuclear cells are attracted,
causing local tissue damage and
inflammation.
– Polyarteritis nodosa, post-streptococcal
glomerulonephritis , systemic lupus
erythematosus
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T cells, sensitized to antigen, release
lymphokines following secondary contact
with the antigen
Cytokines induce an inflammatory response,
activate and attract macrophages, release
inflammatory mediators.
Antibodies produced against fixed cellular
or tissue antigens are usually autoantibodies
– Crohn's disease, leprosy, tuberculosis, sarcoidosis,
schistosomiasis
Parents with allergy greater likelihood of
producing allergic children
Food allergies
Environment— air pollution
Smoking
History—environmental exposure, smoking,
seasonal occurrence, pets, foods
Examination
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Allergic shiners
Allergic salute
Supratip crease
Dennie’s lines (skin fold under eyes)
Adenoid facies
Skin testing
◦ Prick/puncture (scratch or patch)
◦ Intradermal
◦ Dilutional intradermal (skin end-point titration-SET)
In vitro testing
◦ RAST (radioactive marker)
◦ ELISA (enzymatic marker)
Prick—few drops of purified allergen pricked
onto skin surface (dust, dander, pollen)
Patch—large patch with different allergens
(latex, medications, metal, fragrances,
preservatives)
Histamine or glycerin used as positive
controls
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Intradermal injection of allergens at
increasing concentrations to measure
allergic response
Start with a very dilute solution
If 2mm of growth noted, then second
injection at a higher concentration is given
to confirm the response
End point is concentration of antigen that
causes an increase in the size of the wheal
followed by confirmatory whealing
Stop at 13 mm
Avoid
medications which may
interfere
◦ Antihistamines
◦ Antidepressants
◦ Antacids
Anaphylaxis
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Low-grade fever
Lightheadedness or dizziness
Wheezing or Shortness of breath
Extensive skin rash
Swelling of face, lips or mouth
Difficulty swallowing or speaking
RAST -radioallergosorbent test—detect
specific IgE antibodies to allergens
Improved sensitivity without loss of
specificity
Excellent reproducibility across the full
measuring range of the calibration curve
Not always necessary to remove patient
from an anthihistamine medication regimen
If skin conditions (such as eczema) are so
widespread that allergy skin testing can not
be done
ELISA – enzyme linked immunosorbent assay
Used more for food allergies
Not as sensitive as skin tests
Environmental control
◦ Stop smoking, clean house, avoid mold, indoor
plants, pets, HEPA filter
Pharmacotherapy
◦ Antihistamines, anti-leukotrienes, mast-cell
stabilizers, topical and systemic steroids
Specific allergens
Vial test
◦ Intradermal test
◦ Smallest measurable dose
Once or twice weekly injections
Dose escalated
Continue treatment 3-5 years
Invasive
◦Acute fulminant
◦Chronic invasive
◦Granulomatous invasive
Noninvasive
◦Saprophytic fungal infestation
◦Fungal ball, “mycetoma”
◦Allergic fungal rhinosinusitis
Corollary to allergic bronchopulmonary
aspergillosis (ABPA)
AFRS cycle
◦ Immune and eosinophilic response to
protein components of fungi
◦ Sinonasal inflammation, viscid
allergic fungal mucin, obstruction,
stasis
Bony remodeling
Inflammatory mediators
◦ Major basic protein
◦ Eosinophilic peroxidase
◦ Tumor necrosis factor
◦ Interleukins
◦ Interferons
Evidence of Type I hypersensitivity (IgE
mediated)
Nasal polyposis
Characteristic CT findings
Eosinophilic mucous
Positive fungal smear
Kuhn and Javer: Otolaryngol Clin North Am 2000,33:2;419-432
Asthma
Unilateral predominance
Radiographic bone erosion
Fungal culture
Charcot-Leyden crystals
Serum eosinophilia
Kuhn and Javer: Otolaryngol Clin North Am 2000,33:2;419-432
Not
all 5 criteria for diagnosis
Gradual nasal airway
obstruction
Thick nasal mucous/crusts
May take years to manifest
AFS-like syndrome
Immunocompetent
Normal
Atopic
ESR, WBC
◦Asthma, hay fever, inhalant
allergy
• Nasal polyposis
Hyperactive
allergic
inflammatory response
Possible fungal toxin
Inflammatory mediators
Recurrent bacterial sinusitis
Role
of IgE
Not consistently elevated in serum
Local IgE-mediated immune
response in nasal mucosa
IgE as cause of inflammation or
merely a marker
Allergic
response to fungus by
skin testing and in vitro
(radioallergosorbent)
methodology
Variable culture results (64-100%)
from sinus contents
Allergic
fungal mucin
◦Sheets of eosinophils
◦Charcot-Leyden crystals
◦Extramucosal fungal
elements
CT
◦ Unilateral or asymmetric
◦ Sinuses Expanded--Bony attenuation
or erosion
◦ Displacement of adjacent structures
◦ Signal heterogeneity
Manning S et al. Laryngoscope 1997;107:170-176
MRI-T1 weighted
◦ Variable signal intensity in involved sinuses
◦ Signal void at periphery (mucosal edema)
MRI-T2 weighted
Hypointensity of signal in sinus (dehydrated
allergic fungal mucin)
Enhancement of periphery of sinus (mucosal
edema)
Medical
Surgical
Break
the Allergic Fungal
Rhinosinusitis Cycle
Functional endoscopic sinus surgery
Complete ventilation of the sinuses
Wide maxillary antrostomies
Complete ethmoidectomies
Sphenoid sinusotomies
Frontal sinusotomies
Complete
removal of allergic
fungal mucin and fungal debris
Mucosal sparing
Save middle turbinate
Frontal sinus obliteration not
advised
PREOPERATIVE
◦ Antibiotics
◦ Steroids
REGIMEN
POSTOPERATIVE
REGIMEN
◦ Steroid taper
◦ Intranasal steroids
◦ Antibiotics
◦ Clinic endoscopy and
debridement
Long-term
systemic steroids
◦ Effective
◦ Multiple potential complications
◦ Screen for DM, cataracts,
glaucoma, + PPD, active
hepatitis
Systemic antifungal agents
Amphotericin B, itraconazole, voriconazole
Mixed results
Expensive
Hepatotoxic
Need regular evaluation of liver function tests
83 patients managed with ESS, itraconazole,
low dose oral steroids, topical steroids
36,000 doses of itraconazole—no adverse
effects
Reoperation required in only 20%
Rains et al. AJR 2003;17:1-8
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Intranasal Amphotericin irrigation—chronic
rhinosinusitis patients
Ponikau et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol
2002:110:862-866
Reduced mucosal inflammation on CT scan
Improvement in symptoms and endoscopic staging
in 75%
Ricchetti et al. J Laryngol Otol 2002;116:261-263
Disappearance of polyps in 62% of mild and 42%
of moderate chronic rhinosinusitis
Beneficial
◦ Mabry, Marple et al. (1997 and 1998)
◦ Prospective study, immunotherapy after surgery,
patients improved, did not require systemic
steroids, recurrences decreased
◦ Retrospective study, 11 patients matched with
controls, immunotherapy patients had improved
quality of life and objective endoscopic measures of
mucosal edema
Both fungal and nonfungal antigens,
administered in separate vials
Weekly immunotherapy, dosage advancement
as tolerated
Include wide variety of mold antigens
Continue for 3-5 years
Regular endoscopy and cleaning
Caveats
Ferguson (1993) reported patients who
received immunotherapy prior to surgery
had worsening of symptoms-ongoing
antigenic loadlocal reactions, immune
complex deposits
Patients who received immunotherapy after
surgery improved
Caution with concomitant ABPA, unable to
surgically remove fungi in lower respiratory
tract
Recurrence
of disease common
Surgical treatment mandatory
Multidisciplinary management
◦ Steroids, antifungals—systemic vs.
topical
◦ Immunotherapy
Better control with prolonged postoperative
medical therapy
Probably immunological disease, not
infectious
Therapy evolving as understanding of disease
process improves
Prolonged, close follow-up needed