Title: Sinusitis in children
1Sinusitis in children
- Presented by
- Theera Rojanapremsuk
2References
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- Clinical practice guideline management of
sinusitis AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 108, Number 3 September 2001 - SINUSITIS IN CHILDREN Dept. of Otolaryngology,
UTMB, Grand Rounds ,Kyle L. Kennedy, M.D.
November 1, 1995 - Up to date 13.1
3 Sinuses
- Sinuses are moist air spaces within the bones of
the face around the nose - Human have 4 pairs of sinuses
- The ethmoid and the maxillary sinuses form in the
third to fourth gestational month - The sphenoid sinuses are generally pneumatized by
5 years of age - the frontal sinuses appear at age 7 to 8 years
but are not completely developed until late
adolescence.
4Sinuses
5 Sinusitis
6Sinusitis
- Sinusitis is the inflammation/infection of 1 or
more paranasal sinuses - It is traditionally subdivided into
- - acute (symptoms lasting lt3 wk)
- - subacute (symptoms lasting 3 wk to 3 mo)
- - chronic (symptoms lasting gt3 mo).
7Anatomy and physiology
- The maxillary, ethmoid, frontal and sphenoid are
air-containing spaces that are lined by
pseudostratified, columna epithelium bearing
cilia - The sinus mucosa contain goblet cells, which
secrete that aids in trapping inhales particle
and debris
8Mucociliary pathways in the maxillary and frontal
sinuses
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10Osteomeatal complex
11- Pattern of the mucociliary clearance is essential
for the proper health of the function of the
paranasal sinuses (PNS) - The middle meatus is functional importance , as
it serves as a drainage pathway for the
maxillary, ethmoid and frontal sinuses
12Epidemiology
- An estimated more than 30 million patients in US
have sinus disease. - Although the exact incidence of sinusitis in the
pediatric population is unclear - Upper respiratory infections (URIs) are one of
the most common presentations - A viral infection associated with the common cold
is the most frequent etiology of acute sinusitis - Approximately 5-13 of URTIs are complicated by
bacterial sinusitis
13Pathogenesis
Secretion stagnate
Secretion thicken pH change
Mucosal gas metabolism change
Mucosal congestion or anatomical obstruction
blocks air flow drainage
Cilia epithelium are damaged
Sinusitis cycle
Change in host milieu creates culture medium for
bacterial growth in closed cavity
Ostium closed
Mucosal thickening creates further blokage
Bacterial infection develops in the sinus cavity
Retained secretion causes tissue inflammation
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15Predisposing factors
- 1. Local factor
- - cold or rhinitis - allergy
- - nasal polyp - foreign body
- - deviated of nasal septum
- 2. Systemic factor
- - cystic fibrosis
- - defective ciliary function
- - immuno- compromised host
16Microbial etiology
- Viruses are the most frequent cause of
rhinosinusitis - viruses are known to predispose to subsequent
bacterial infection via such mechanisms as
viral-induced impairment of the mucociliary
apparatus. -
17 Microbial etiology
18Diagnosis
- Sign and symptom
- Physical examination
- Radiologic tests
19 sign and symptom of sinusitis
- Nasal congestion
- Purulent discharge
- Maxillary tooth discomfort
- Hyposmia
- Facial pain or pressure that is worse when
bending forward
20Sites of refered pain from individual sinuses
21Sign and symptoms
- In pediatric patients, most URIs last 5-7 days.
- By 10 days, the URI almost always improves.
- Most rhinoviral infections improve within 7-10
days so the complaint of persistent or worsening
symptoms may indicate a developing bacterial
sinusitis. - Pediatric patients may complain of a daytime
cough and persistent nasal discharge. - Complaints of facial pain and headache are rare
in children.
22- Younger kids typically have cold-like symptoms,
including a stuffy or runny nose and slight fever - if child develops a fever after the third
or fourth day after cold symptom begin, it could
sinusitis - In older children and teens, the most frequent
symptoms of sinusitis are a daytime dry cough
that doesn't improve after the first 7 days of
cold symptoms, fever, worsening congestion,
dental pain, ear pain, or tenderness in the face. -
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24Physical examination
- - Facial tenderness to palpation is present
- - Nasal mucosa is inflammation, redness and
swelling - - Purulent secretions in the middle meatus
(highly predictive of maxillary sinusitis) - - Complete opacification of sinus on
transillumination is present.
25Transillumination of the Maxillary Sinus. A light
source is placed along the infraorbital rim, and
the hard palate is inspected.
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27Radiologic tests
28Plain film
- - caldwell for frontal and ethmoid
- - Waters for maxillary and sphenoid
- - submentovertex and lateral for
- sphenoid
29Caldwell
Waters
30Lateral
Submentovertex
31Plain film
The right maxillary sinus shows mucosal thickening
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33 CT scan
- - CT scanning is the criterion standard for
evaluation - - Indications for obtaining a CT of the
sinuses include - 1. evidence of severe, persistent sinus
disease following maximal medical therapy - 2. sinus disease in the immunocompromised
patient - 3. suspicion of a suppurative complication of
sinus disease.
34 CT scan
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36Therapy
- Non-medical treatment
- Medical theray
- Surgical therapy
37 Supportive treatment
- Avoid cigarette smoking
- Drink plenty of liquids
- Steam (e.g. showers or baths) to loosen
secretions - Warm facial packs for 5-10 minutes 3-4 times a
day to promote drainage - Saline nasal spray or drops may provide some
relieve - Adequate rest
- Elevate head of bed to promote sinus drainage
38Medical therapy
- Acetaminophen or ibuprofen
- Decongestants
- Antihistamine
- Mucoevacuants
- Antibiotics
39Antibiotics
- Amoxicillin remains as efficacious as newer drugs
80-90 MKD divided bid for 10-14 days (maximum
dose 2-3 g/day) - If not improvement in 48-72 hrs ceftriaxone or
amoxicillin-clavulanate 80-90 MKD divided bid for
7-10 days - Other treatment alternatives cefdinir,
cefpodoxime, cefuroxime - For severe allergies azithromycin or
clarithromycin
40- For the treatment of recurrent or chronic
sinusitis, a more lengthy course of therapy,
usually with a beta lactamase- resistant
antibiotic, is desirable - 3-4 week course of an appropriate antibiotic
- In the immunocompromised patient, prophylactic
antibiotic regimens are often utilized in
addition to aggressive general management.
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42Surgical therapy
- Indirect sinus procedure
- - septoplasty
- - adenoidectomy
- Direct sinus procedure
- - antral lavage sinus aspiration
- - Nasal antral windows
- - Middle meatal antrostomy
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44Complication
- Orbital involvement
- - Preseptal cellulitis - Eyelid edema,
erythema, normal globe movement - - Orbital cellulitis - Proptosis, chemosis
- - Periorbital abscess - Proptosis with globe
displaced inferolaterally, decreased extraocular
muscle movement - - Orbital abscess - Severe proptosis,
impaired visual acuity, fixed globe, toxic
patient - - Cavernous sinus thrombosis - High fever,
bilateral symptoms
45- Intracranial involvement
-
- - Intracranial involvement usually occurs
subsequent to direct spread from sphenoid or
frontal sinus disease. - - Subdural and frontal lobe abscesses are
most common. - -Meningitis may occur
46Thank you
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