Sinusitis
Presentation
Following a viral infection, the patient will usually complain of a dull pain in the face,
gradually increasing over a couple of days, exacerbated by sudden motion of the head,
or holding the head dependent, between the knees, and perhaps radiating to the upper
molar teeth (via the maxillary antrum), or with eye movement (via the ethmoid
sinuses). Often there is a sensation of facial congestion and stuffiness. Children with
sinusitis often present with cough and fetid breath. Fever is only present in half of
patients with acute infection and is usually low grade. A high fever usually indicates a
serious complication such as meningitis or another diagnosis altogether.
Transillumination of sinuses in the ED is usually unrewarding, but you may elicit
tenderness on gentle percussion or firm palpation over the maxillary or frontal sinuses
or between the eyes (ethmoid sinuses). Swelling and erythema may exist and you may
even see pus draining below the nasal turbinates, with a purulent, yellow-green and
sometimes foul-smelling or bloody discharge from the nose or running down the
posterior pharynx. The patient's voice may have a resonance similar to that of a
"stopped up" nose, and he may complain of a foul taste in his mouth. Stuffy ears and
impaired hearing are common because of associated serous otitis media and eustachian
tube dysfunction.
What to do:
·Rule out other causes of facial pain or headache via history (did the patient wake
up with a typical migraine?) and physical examination (palpate scalp muscles,
temporal arteries, temperomandibular joints, eyes, and teeth).
·Shrink swollen nasal mucosa (and thereby open the ostia draining the sinuses)
with 1% phenylephrine (Neo-Synephrine) or 0.05% oxymetazoline (Afrin) nose
drops. Drip 2 drops in each nostril, have the patient lie supine 2 minutes, and
then repeat the process (this allows the first application to open the anterior
nose so the second gets farther back). Have the patient repeat this process
every 4 hours, but for no more than three days (to avoid rhinitis
medicamentosa).
·Examine the nose for purulent drainage before and after shrinking the nasal
mucosa with topical vasoconstrictor.
·Add systemic sympathomimetic decongestants (e.g., pseudephedrine (Sudafed)
60mg q6h or phenylpropanolamine (Entex LA) 75mg q12h).
·If there is fever, pus, heat, or any other sign of a bacterial superinfection, add
antibiotics (e.g., amoxicillin, trimethoprim plus sulfamethoxazole, amoxicillin plus
clavulinate, erythromycin plus sulfasoxazole, cefuroxime). First-line antibiotic
therapy is amoxicillin, or, for patients with penicillin allergy, Bactrim or Sulfa. If
the patient has been recently treated with these medications or if the infection
appears to be serious, then treat with a second-line drug like Ceftin or
Augmentin.
·Provide pain relief, when necessary (e.g., ibuprofen, naproxyn, acetaminophen,
oxycodone, hydrocodone)