Sinusitis

20,072views

00:00 / 00:00

High Yield Notes

10 pages

Flashcards

Sinusitis

of complete

Questions

USMLE® Step 1 style questions USMLE

of complete

A 50-year-old woman is admitted to the emergency room for facial pain, weakness, and malaise. She also has a throbbing headache. Past medical history is significant for type II diabetes mellitus and HIV infection. Home medications include zidovudine, lamivudine, lopinavir, ritonavir and metformin. However, she admits to poor compliance with the medications. The patient’s CD4 count is 121 cells/mm3, and viral load is 50,000. Physical examination shows exquisite tenderness to palpation over the right maxillary sinus. Additionally, there is a black eschar over her nares and palate. Which of the following symptoms would suggest a severe complication of the patient’s condition?

Memory Anchors and Partner Content

External References

First Aid

2024

2023

2022

2021

Haemophilus influenzae p. , 140

rhinosinusitis p. 691

Moraxella catarrhalis

rhinosinusitis p. 691

Rhinosinusitis p. 690

Sinusitis

brain abscesses p. 177

C3 deficiency and p. 105

Kartagener syndrome p. 47, 720

Wegener granulomatosis p. 322

Upper respiratory infections (URIs)

rhinosinusitis p. 691

Transcript

Watch video only

Sinusitis is inflammation of the paranasal sinuses - which are pairs of air spaces that surround the nose in the front of the face.

Usually, acute sinusitis can last up to four weeks, subacute sinusitis lasts between 1 to 3 months, and chronic sinusitis lasts more than 3 months.

When you breathe in, air flows through the nostrils and enters the nasal cavity, which is lined by goblet cells that release mucus.

That mucus is salty, sticky, and contains lysozymes, which are enzymes that help kill bacteria.

Nose hairs at the entrance of the nasal cavity get coated with that mucus and are able to trap large particles of dust and pollen as well as bacteria, forming tiny clumps of boogers.

The nasal cavity is connected to four paired paranasal sinuses, named according to the bones in which they lie.

The largest are the maxillary sinuses, found right below the eyes.

Then we have the ethmoidal and sphenoidal sinuses behind the eyes.

Finally, the frontal sinuses are in the forehead, right above the eyes.

The paranasal sinuses act like tiny echo-chambers that help amplify the sound of your voice, which is why you sound so different when they’re clogged with mucus during a cold!

They also allow the inspired air to circulate for a bit so it has time to get warm and moist.

Like the rest of the respiratory tract, the walls of the paranasal sinuses are made up of a mucosal epithelium.

The mucosal epithelium contains goblet cells, which produce mucus to trap small foreign particles, as well as columnar cells, which have cilia, which are tiny little hair like projections that move mucus, draining into the nasal passages.

One of these passages is also called a nasal meatus, and there are three; the superior, middle, and inferior meatus which help drain mucus.

The sphenoidal sinus drains to the spheno-ethmoidal recess, which is a small space in the nasal cavity right above the superior meatus.

The ethmoid sinus can be divided into posterior, which drains to the superior meatus, middle and anterior, both draining into the middle meatus. And finally the maxillary and frontal sinuses drain into the middle meatus.

Summary

Sinusitis is a common condition in which the paranasal sinuses become inflamed, which makes it more difficult for them to drain. The condition can be caused by a viral, bacterial, or fungal infection, or by other factors such as allergies. Symptoms of sinusitis include facial pain, headaches, fevers, congestion, nasal discharge, and a cough that's typically worse at night. Treatment may include antibiotics, decongestants, and pain relievers. In some cases, sinus surgery may be necessary to open up the wall of the infected sinus to allow it to drain more easily into the nasal cavity.