Dictionary Definition
sinusitis n : inflammation of one of the
paranasal sinuses
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
sinusitis- inflammation of the paranasal sinuses
Translations
inflammation
- Czech: zánět dutin, sinusitida
- Finnish: sinuiitti, poskiontelotulehdus
- Greek: ιγμορίτιδα
- Romanian: sinuzită
Extensive Definition
Sinusitis is an inflammation of the
paranasal
sinuses, which may or may not be as a result of infection, from
bacterial, fungal, viral, allergic or autoimmune issues. Newer
classifications of sinusitis refer to it as rhinosinusitis, taking
into account the thought that inflammation of the sinuses
cannot occur without some inflammation of the
nose as well (rhinitis).
Classification
By location
There are several paired paranasal sinuses, including the frontal, ethmoid, maxillary and sphenoid sinuses. The ethmoid sinuses can also be further broken down into anterior and posterior, the division of which is defined as the basal lamella of the middle turbinate. In addition to the acuity of disease, discussed below, sinusitis can be classified by the sinus cavity which it affects:- Frontal sinusitis - can cause pain or pressure in the frontal sinus cavity (located behind/above eyes), headache (J01.1/J32.1)
Recent theories of sinusitis indicate that it
often occurs as part of a spectrum of diseases that affect the
respiratory
tract (i.e. - the "one airway" theory) and is often linked to
asthma. All forms of
sinusitis may either result in, or be a part of, a generalized
inflammation of the
airway so other airway symptoms such as cough may be associated with
it.
By duration
Sinusitis can be acute (going on less than four weeks), subacute (4-12 weeks) or chronic (going on for 12 weeks or more).All three types of sinusitis have similar
symptoms, and are thus
often difficult to distinguish.
Acute sinusitis
Acute sinusitis is usually precipitated by an earlier upper respiratory tract infection, generally of viral origin. Virally damaged surface tissues are then colonized by bacteria, most commonly Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Moraxella catarrhalis and Staphylococcus aureus. Other bacterial pathogens include other streptococci species, anaerobic bacteria and, less commonly, gram negative bacteria. Another possible cause of sinusitis can be dental problems that affect the maxillary sinus. Acute episodes of sinusitis can also result from fungal invasion. These infections are most often seen in patients with diabetes or other immune deficiencies (such as AIDS or transplant patients on anti-rejection medications) and can be life threatening. In type I diabetes, ketoacidosis causes sinusitis by Mucormycosis.Chronic sinusitis
Chronic sinusitis is a complicated spectrum of diseases that share chronic inflammation of the sinuses in common. The causes are multifactorial and may include allergy, environmental factors such as dust or pollution, bacterial infection, or fungus (either allergic, infective, or reactive). Non allergic factors such as Vasomotor rhinitis can also cause chronic sinus problems. Abnormally narrow sinus passages, which can impede drainage from the sinus cavities, can also be a factor.Symptoms include: Nasal
congestion; facial pain; headache; fever; general malaise; thick green or yellow
discharge;
blurred
vision, feeling of facial 'fullness' worsening on bending over;
aching teeth.
In a small number of cases, chronic maxillary sinusitis can also
be brought on by the spreading of bacteria from a dental
infection.
Attempts have been made to provide a more
consistent nomenclature 6 for subtypes of chronic sinusitis. A task
force for the American Academy of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck
Surgery / Foundation along with the Sinus and Allergy Health
Partnership broke Chronic Sinusitis into two main divisions,
Chronic Sinusitis without polyps and Chronic Sinusitis with polyps
(also often referred to as Chronic Hyperplastic Sinusitis). Recent
studies which have sought to further determine and characterize a
common pathologic progression of disease have resulted in an
expansion of proposed subtypes. Many patients have demonstrated the
presence of eosinophils
in the mucous lining of the nose and paranasal sinuses. As such the
name Eosinophilic Mucin RhinoSinusitis (EMRS) has come into being.
Cases of EMRS may be related to an allergic response, but allergy
is often not documentable, resulting in further subcategorization
of allergic and non-allergic EMRS.
A more recent, and still debated, development in
chronic sinusitis is the role that fungus may play. Fungus can be
found in the nasal cavities and sinuses of most patients with
sinusitis, but can also be found in healthy people as well. It
remains unclear if fungus is a definite factor in the development
of chronic sinusitis and if it is, what the difference may be
between those who develop the disease and those who do not.
Role of biofilms
Biofilms are complex aggregates of extracellular matrix and inter-dependent microorganisms from multiple species, many of which may be difficult or impossible to isolate using standard clinical laboratory techniques. Bacteria found in biofilms may show increased antibiotic resistance when compared to free-living bacteria of the same species. It has been hypothesized that biofilm-type infections may account for many cases of antibiotic-refractory chronic sinusitis. A recent study found that biofilms were present on the mucosa of 3/4 of patients undergoing surgery for chronic sinusitis.Sinus headache vs. migraine
Headache/facial pain (characteristic of Sinusitis pain are dull, constant, aching pain over the affected frontal or sphenoid sinus area) is one of the general symptom complained during acute or chronic stages of Sinusitis (Sinusitis = tender face + coryza + post nasal drip). This pain (i.e. facial pain (pressure), headache) is typically localised to the involved sinus and is worsened when the affected person bends over or when in supine position. Rarely, sphenoid or Ethmoid sinusitis causes severe frontal or retroorbital pain and advanced frontal sinusitis can present as Pott's puffy tumour. During Acute sinusitis thick purulent nasal discharge (usually green in colour and with or without blood) and typical localised headache (toothache) are present. Whereas in Migraine (Migraine = episodic typical unilateral headache + often Vomiting + visual disturbances) photo phobia, phono phobia and Triad 1. premonitory visual (scotoma or scintillations) sensory or motor symptoms, 2. unilateral throbbing headache, 3. nausea and vomiting are present.Recent studies on sinusitis and migraine
Headache is a common symptom of sinusitis and "sinus headache" rarely but can be a misdiagnosis of a migraine. Acute sinusitis can cause pressure within the sinus cavities of the head, but this typically has associated pain to palpation of the sinus area and purulent greenish discharge from the nose. The use of the term sinus headache therefore is often misleading and results in underdiagnosis of migraine. Recent studies indicate that up to 90% of "sinus headaches" are migraine This confusion occurs in part because migraine involves activation of the trigeminal nerves which innervate both the sinus region but also the meninges which surround the brain. As a result, direct determination of the site of pain origination can be confused on a cortical level. Additionally, nasal congestion is not an uncommon result of migraine headaches, further confusing the issue. A recent study further demonstrated that most patients with "sinus headache" respond to triptan migraine medications, and state dissatisfaction with their treatment when they are treated with decongestants or antibiotics.. The subtlety is that while most patients with sinusitis have some sort of facial pain, pressure, or headache, not all patients who attribute the symptom of headache to their sinuses may have legitimate diseases of the sinus. Acute and chronic sinusitis can cause pressure within the sinus cavities of the head, but this is associated with pain on palpation of the sinus area.Predisposing factors
Factors which may predispose to developing sinusitis include: allergies; structural problems such as a deviated septum or small sinus ostia; smoking; nasal polyps; carrying the cystic fibrosis gene (research is still tentative); prior bouts of sinusitis as each instance may result in increased inflammation of the nasal or sinus mucosa and potentially further narrow the openings.Diagnosis
Acute sinusitis
Usually Sinusitis is diagnosed clinically.Clinically bacterial and Viral Acute sinusitis are
difficult to distinguish however, disease duration less than 7 days
is considered as a Viral whereas more than 7 days are considered as
a bacterial sinusitis (usually 40% to 50% are Bacterial sinusitis).
- In suspected Acute Fungal Sinusitis - Multiple biopsy of involved area are performed to confirm etiological diagnosis.
- Nosocomial Acute sinusitis is confirmed with the help of CT scan of the sinuses.
Chronic sinusitis
In Chronic sinusitis (lasting more than 12 weeks) CT scan, tissue sample for Histology and Cultures can be used for diagnosis.- In Chronic Bacterial sinusitis CT scan is used to define the range, extent of the disease and response of the treatment course. Tissue samples for Histology and culture is obtained to confirm a diagnosis.
- Allergic fungal sinusitis are often seen in a person with asthma and nasal polyps. Multiple Biopsy is informative to confirm the diagnosis .
When imaging techniques are required for
diagnosis CT
scanning is the method of choice. If allergies are suspected,
allergy testing may be performed.
ENT specialists utilize a procedure known as
nasal endoscopy (if nasal endoscopy is indicated) to diagnose sinus
infection. This involves inserting a flexible fiber-optic tube with
a light and camera at its tip into the nose to examine the nasal
passages and sinuses. This is generally a completely painless
procedure which takes between 5 to 10 minutes to complete.
Treatment
Acute sinusitis
There are over the counter medicines that can relieve some of the symptoms associated with sinusitis, such as headaches, pressure, fatigue and pain. Usually these are a combination of some kind of antihistamine along with decongestant or pain reliever. Seeing a doctor will usually result in a prescription for antibiotics and a recommendation for rest.Therapeutic measures range from the medicinal to
the traditional and may include nasal
irrigation or jala neti using
a warm saline solution, hot drinks including tea and chicken
soup, over-the-counter decongestants and nasal sprays, and
getting plenty of rest. Analgesics (such as aspirin, paracetamol (acetaminophen)
or ibuprofen) can be
used, but caution must be employed to make sure the patient does
not suffer from aspirin-exacerbated
respiratory disease (AERD) as this could lead to anaphylaxis.
If sinusitis doesn't improve within 48 hours, or
is causing significant pain, a doctor may prescribe antibiotics (Amoxicillin
usually being the most common) with amoxicillin/clavulanate
(Augmentin/Co-Amoxiclav)
being indicated for patients who fail amoxicillin alone. Fluoroquinolones,
and less frequently Doxycycline are
used in patients who are allergic to penicillins.
A recent British study has found that for most
cases of acute sinusitis, antibiotics and nasal corticosteroids work no
better than a placebo.
Chronic sinusitis
Simple measures
Nasal irrigation and flush promotes sinus cavity health, and patients with chronic sinusitis including symptoms of facial pain, headache, halitosis, cough, anterior rhinorrhea (watery discharge) and nasal congestion found nasal irrigation to be "just as effective at treating these symptoms as the drug therapies." In other studies, "daily hypertonic saline nasal irrigation improves sinus-related quality of life, decreases symptoms, and decreases medication use in patients with frequent sinusitis," and is "recommended as an effective adjunctive treatment of chronic sinonasal symptoms."sinusitis in Arabic: التهاب الجيوب
sinusitis in Bulgarian: Синуит
sinusitis in German: Sinusitis
sinusitis in Spanish: Sinusitis
sinusitis in French: Sinusite
sinusitis in Korean: 부비강염
sinusitis in Croatian: Sinusitis
sinusitis in Indonesian: Sinusitis
sinusitis in Italian: Sinusite
sinusitis in Dutch: Bijholteontsteking
sinusitis in Japanese: 副鼻腔炎
sinusitis in Norwegian: Bihulebetennelse
sinusitis in Polish: Zapalenie zatok
przynosowych
sinusitis in Portuguese: Sinusite
sinusitis in Russian: Синусит
sinusitis in Albanian: Sinuziti
sinusitis in Finnish: Poskiontelontulehdus
sinusitis in Swedish: Bihåleinflammation
sinusitis in Thai: ไซนัสอักเสบ
sinusitis in Vietnamese: Viêm xoang
sinusitis in Turkish: Sinüzit
sinusitis in Chinese: 鼻竇炎
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
adenoiditis, adrenitis, appendicitis, arteritis, arthritis
deformans, arthritis fungosa, arthritis pauperum, atrophic
arthritis, atrophic inflammation, blennorrhagic arthritis, brain
fever, bronchitis,
bunion, bursitis, capillaritis, carditis, catarrh, catarrhal inflammation,
cerebellitis,
cerebral meningitis, cerebritis, cerebrospinal
meningitis, chronic infectious arthritis, chronic inflammation,
cirrhotic inflammation, climactic arthritis, clitoritis, colitis, collagen disease,
conjunctivitis,
cystitis, degenerative
arthritis, diffuse inflammation, encephalitis, endocarditis, enteritis, equine
encephalomyelitis, exudative inflammation, fibroid inflammation,
focal inflammation, gastritis, gingivitis, glossitis, gonococcal
arthritis, gonorrheal arthritis, gonorrheal rheumatism, gout, gouty arthritis, hemophilic
arthritis, hepatitis,
hyperplastic inflammation, hypertrophic arthritis, hypertrophic
inflammation, infectional arthritis, infectious hepatitis, inflammation, irritable
bowel syndrome, laryngitis, lumbago, lumbar rheumatism,
mastoiditis,
meningitis,
menopausal arthritis, metastatic inflammation, metritis, milk leg, mucous
colitis, mumps meningitis, myelitis, necrotic
inflammation, nephritis, neuritis, obliterative
inflammation, ophthalitis, ophthalmia, orchitis, osseous rheumatism,
osteitis, osteoarthritis, osteomyelitis, otitis, ovaritis, paradental pyorrhea,
penitis, pericarditis, periodontitis, peritonitis, pharyngitis, phlebitis, podagra, proliferative
arthritis, prostatitis, pyonephritis, pyorrhea, pyorrhea alveolaris,
reactive inflammation, rheumatism, rheumatiz, rheumatoid
arthritis, rhinitis,
sclerosing inflammation, seroplastic inflammation, serous
inflammation, serum hepatitis, simple inflammation, spastic colon,
specific inflammation, subacute rheumatism, suppurative arthritis,
suppurative inflammation, syphilitic arthritis, tennis elbow,
testitis, thrombophlebitis,
tonsilitis, torticollis, toxic
inflammation, traumatic inflammation, tuberculous arthritis,
tuberculous rheumatism, ulcerative colitis, uratic arthritis,
ureteritis, urethral
arthritis, urethritis, uteritis, vaginitis, vertebral
arthritis, visceral rheumatism, vulvitis, wryneck