Manage Sinusitis

Beware: there are other diseases that can mimic sinusitis - Ellen Wald

Manage Sinusitis
Manage Sinusitis

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Acute Sinusitis: A Nebulous Diagnosis with Fuzzy Treatment Principles

Acute sinusitis is a common medical problem, but unfortunately, the diagnosis is applied quite liberally by patients and physicians. Treatment decisions are often guided (or misguided) by incorrect assumptions about the etiology of the disease, shaky diagnostic criteria, and dubious benefits to antimicrobial therapy. Even when the diagnosis is carefully restricted to patients who are the most likely to have an acute bacterial illness, there are conflicting study data and disagreement among experts on the value of antibiotics.

In this regard, sinusitis resembles acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis; there are no objective or easily applied diagnostic criteria. Many patients get…

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 Acute Sinusitis: A Nebulous Diagnosis with Fuzzy Treatment Principles

Acute sinusitis is a common medical problem, but unfortunately, the diagnosis is applied quite liberally by patients and physicians. Treatment decisions are often guided (or misguided) by incorrect assumptions about the etiology of the disease, shaky diagnostic criteria, and dubious benefits to antimicrobial therapy.

Core EM

Bottom Line: Given the risk for adverse events associated with antibiotic use, the growing specter of resistance and the lack of significant differences in outcomes with antibiotic use, it is better to avoid antibiotics in most patients with ARS. Antibiotics should be considered in those with severe disease and in immunocompromised patients

International Emergency Medicine Education Project

Sinusitis is one of the most common infections treated by emergency physicians and affects about 1 in 8 adults in the north America. It is the fifth most common diagnosis for which antibiotics are prescribed.

Infectious Disease Advisor

Beware: there are other diseases that can mimic sinusitis...

MedBullets

Acute sinusitis supportive therapy for 7 days analgesia (tylenol), nasal saline irrigation, decongestants, adequate hydration no antibiotics unless no clinical improvement during observation period or temperature >38.3 C antibiotic for 10-14 days amoxicillin-clavulanate is first line.

StatPearls

Most cases of uncomplicated acute bacterial sinusitis can be treated as an outpatient with a good prognosis. Frontal or sphenoid sinusitis with air-fluid levels may require hospitalization with intravenous (IV) antibiotics.

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