The clinical and radiologic records of 500 sequential patients who underwent screening sinus CT as a prelude to possible functional endoscopic sinus surgery (FESS) were reviewed in order to answer three clinical-radiologic questions: (1) Can distinct radiologic patterns of inflammatory disease be identified on screening sinus CT (SSCT)? (2) If so, what are these radiologic patterns? (3) How do the findings seen on SSCT influence the endoscopic surgical plan? Five basic radiologic patterns of sinonasal inflammatory disease were identified among the 500-member patient population. These were based on known patterns of mucociliary drainage correlated with obstructive patterns observed on the CT scans. These radiologic patterns included: (1) infundibular (129 of 500 or 26%), (2) ostiomeatal unit (126 of 500 or 25%), (3) sphenoethmoidal recess (32 of 500 or 6%), (4) sinonasal polyposis (49 of 500 or 10%), and (5) sporadia (unclassifiable) (121 of 500 or 24%) patterns. Normal SSCT was seen in 133 of the 500 patients (27%). Although the ostiomeatal unit is the central feature in sinonasal inflammatory disease, obstruction of the infundibulum alone or of the sphenoethmoidal recess can cause unique inflammatory patterns of disease that require tailored FESS. The identification of sinonasal polyposis raises a different set of FESS considerations. The sporadic pattern of inflammatory disease, when identified, creates unique FESS challenges, depending on the specific sinus or sinuses involved. Assignment of these patterns to the individual case also assists in patient management by grouping patients into nonsurgical (normal CT), routine (infundibular, ostiomeatal unit, and most sporadic patterns) and complex (sinonasal polyposis and sphenoethmoidal recess) surgical groups.
Enophthalmos eaused by inadequate maxillary sinusfu nction was first reported in 1964. Since this initial report, seattered ease reports and, more recently, reviews have appeared in the literature detailing the pathoph ysio logy, eliniea l findings, and management of this process. We present a elassie ease ofthe asymptomatic development of enophthalmos caused by maxillary sinus hypoventilation: the silent sinus syndrome. In addition, this ease included findings in the ethmo id sinuses that suggested their contribution to this disorder, which by our review of the literatu re has not been well deseribed.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.