Acute bacterial sinusitis
From IDWiki
Background
- See also nosocomial sinusitis and invasive fungal sinusitis
Microbiology
- Streptococcus pneumoniae (most common; 41% in adults and children)
- Non-typable Haemophilus influenzae (35% in adults, 27% in children)
- Moraxella catarrhalis (4% in adults, 22% in children)
- Streptococci (7% in adults and children)
- Anaerobes (7% in adults)
- Staphylococcus aureus (3% in adults)
Risk Factors
- Systemic factors
- Viral upper respiratory infection
- Allergic rhinitis and asthma
- Cystic fibrosis
- Immune disorders including agammaglobulinemia, HIV, and chronic granulomatous disease
- Ciliary dyskinesia
- Tobacco smoke
- Mechanical factors: choanal atresia, cleft palate, deviated septum, nasal polyps, foreign body, tumour, ethmoid bullae
- Local factors: facial trauma, swimming and diving, rhinitis medicamentosa, nasal intubation
Clinical Manifestations
- May have periorbital edema with involvement of the ethmoid sinuses that must be differentiated from periorbital cellulitis
Complications
- Complications occur more commonly in sinusitis including the frontal and ethmoidsinuses
- Intracranial: subdural empyema, epidural abscess, intraparenchymal brain abscess, meningitis, and venous sinus thrombosis
- Consider these diagnoses with fever, altered mentation, seizures, or focal neurologic deficits
- Extracranial: orbital cellulitis, orbital abscess, and subperiosteal abscess, including Pott puffy tumour
Management
- For adults, treat with amoxicillin-clavulanic acid for 10 days
- For children
- Treat if severe, and can either treat or watch and wait if mild to moderate
- Use amoxicillin with or without clavulanic acid
- Alternatives include cefpodoxime, cefixime, cefdinir, azithromycin, clarithromycin, levofloxacin, and moxifloxacin
- Large-volume nasal irrigation may be helpful, especially with chronic symptoms