Computerised tomography (CT) scans are routinely performed prior to endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) in order to confirm the diagnosis, assess the response to medical treatment and provide important landmarks for surgery. However, the correlation between the findings of CT scans and the patient's symptoms remains ambiguous. The objective was to assess the correlation between preoperative symptom scores using the validated Sino-Nasal Assessment Questionnaire and CT scores in patients undergoing ESS. Twenty-two patients who attended otolaryngology clinics with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) were prospectively enrolled in the study. All of these patients completed Sinonasal Questionnaires (SNAQ) before they had ESS. Their CT scans were scored blindly by the surgeon and a radiologist following Lund-Mackay grading. Patients with high preoperative SNAQ scores had high or low CT scores. The same applied for patients with low preoperative SNAQ scores. There was no statistically significant correlation between SNAQ and Lund-Mackay scores (P = 0.5). However, there was a very strong correlation (P < 0.001) between the scoring of scans by the surgeon and the radiologist, while there was a moderate degree of discrepancy in the grading of anterior ethmoid sinuses and osteo-meatal complexes. Morbidity of patients with CRS cannot be predicted from the magnitude of changes in their CT scans. Significant inter-rater variability exists in the grading of pathological changes in anterior ethmoid sinus and osteo-meatal complex as recorded in CT scans.
Background: Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a heterogeneous group of inflammatory sinonasal disorders with key defining symptoms, but traditionally separated into phenotypes by clinical/endoscopic findings. It is not known whether the two phenotypes have differing socioeconomic, comorbidity, and lifestyle differences. This analysis of the Chronic Rhinosinusitis Epidemiology Study (CRES) database sought to analyze any key differences in the socioeconomic variables between those with CRS with nasal polyps (CRSwNPs) and those without nasal polyps (CRSsNPs). We also sought to analyze differences in comorbidities, lifestyle, and quality of life.Methods: Patients with a confirmed diagnosis of CRS in secondary and tertiary care outpatient settings in the UK were invited to participate in a questionnaire-based case-control study. Variables included demographics, socioeconomic factors, comorbidities, lifestyle factors, and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) (level 3 evidence).Results: A total of 1204 patients' data were analyzed: 553 CRSsNP and 651 CRSwNP participants. The key socioeconomic variables did not demonstrate any notable differences, nor did lifestyle variables other than alcohol consumption being higher in those with CRSwNP (P = .032), but the latter was not significant after adjusting for age and sex. Aside from confirmation of asthma being more common in CRSwNP, it was notable that this group complained less of upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs), and CRSsNP participants showed evidence of worse HRQoL scores in respect of body pain (P = .001).Conclusions: Patients with CRSwNP experience higher rates of asthma and lower rates of URTIs; patients with CRSsNP have worse body pain scores. Otherwise, there are no demonstrable significant socioeconomic, comorbidity, lifestyle, or quality of life differences between the two phenotypes.
Children with mild to moderate disease had significantly better quality of life scores than those with severe disease. It is thought that those with mild to moderate disease have short-term improvements in general quality of life after surgery, which disappear in the medium term. This transient improvement needs to be balanced against the morbidity of the surgery and the cost burden to the National Health Service. The results of this study support the national drive towards limiting tonsillectomy to children with severe tonsillitis or obstructive sleep apnoea.
The sino-nasal assessment questionnaire is a system used for scoring the symptoms of chronic rhinosinusitis. However, the range of scores for this questionnaire in the healthy adult population is unknown. We aimed to establish this by recruiting 100 healthy volunteers and comparing their sino-nasal assessment questionnaire scores with those of 100 individuals who had undergone sinus surgery for rhinosinusitis. The difference in mean scores in the symptomatic group (44.62) and the asymptomatic group (8.46) was statistically significant. However, there was substantial overlap between the scores of the two groups. Factors such as age, gender and smoking did not have a statistically significant impact on the eventual score in the asymptomatic group. We believe that symptom scores can only be used effectively when the range in the asymptomatic population is known. This is so that disease severity can be gauged in the context of the normal population and post-operative improvements can be forecast.
Recurrent croup is a distinct clinical entity from viral croup. It is not a specific diagnosis and its presence should alert the clinician to explore the underlying cause. We discuss an evidence-based structured approach to management of a child with recurrent croup.
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