Background
Rhinitis affects up to 40% of the population worldwide and can significantly reduce quality of life. Some patients remain symptomatic despite maximal medical therapy. In refractory cases, posterior nasal neurectomy (PNN—the endoscopic division of the intranasal nerve branches containing postganglionic parasympathetic fibres) is postulated to reduce symptom burden.
Objectives of Review
To establish whether PNN is effective and safe in the management of allergic and non‐allergic rhinitis.
Type of Review
Systematic review.
Methods
A comprehensive literature search was undertaken using PubMed, EMBASE, MEDLINE, and Cochrane. The inclusion criteria were: studies published in English, studies where PNN was performed either with or without additional procedures, and where measures of objective/subjective outcomes and/or complications were reported. Extracted data included study type, sample size, surgical technique, study population characteristics, follow‐up period, outcome measures, complications of surgery, and symptom outcomes.
Results
A total of 23 articles satisfied the inclusion criteria studying in total 2282 patients. Sample size ranged from 8 to 1056. There were 3 randomised controlled trials, 3 case‐control studies, and the remaining 17 were case series using both objective and subjective outcome measures. All but one study found improved patient‐reported outcomes following PNN. Complications were reported in 14 studies—epistaxis was the most common complication and was observed in 30 patients (1.5% of subjects).
Conclusions
PNN had a low rate of complications. Although most studies reported significant symptomatic improvement, their heterogeneity, level of evidence, study design, and/or quality was not sufficient to draw any firm conclusions on the effectiveness of the procedure. Larger, well‐designed studies are needed to clarify its role in the management of difficult‐to‐treat rhinitis.
Five patients under follow-up for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) at Southern General Hospital Glasgow presented with a fixed flexion deformity of the neck. These cases are characterized by the onset of severe weakness and atrophy of the neck extensor muscles and anterior fibrosis forcing the mandible to the chest wall. This causes considerable morbidity with communication, feeding, and appearance. This is a rare complication with no curative treatments that has not been reported previously by a UK center and is likely to become important with the increased use of multimodality treatments for head and neck SCC.
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