Abstract

To assess the relationships between mucosal thickness, T1-weighted, T2-weighted signals and restricted diffusion on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with the degree of symptoms in patients with incidentally detected inflammatory sinonasal disease. Conventional and diffusion-weighted MRI of 100 patients with incidental sinonasal mucosal thickening were prospectively evaluated. There were 53 men and 47 women, with a mean age of 44.6 years±15.17 (SD) (range: 18-81 years). Correlations between quantitative values (T1-signal, T2-signal and apparent diffusion coefficient [ADC]) and three different quality of life questionnaires (chronic sinusitis survey, sinonasal outcomes test-22 and nasal obstruction and septoplasty effectiveness scale [NOSE]) were searched using the Spearman correlation test. The mean SNOT-22 score was 35.81±20.36 (SD) (range: 0-83), CSS score was 4.64±3.42 (SD) (range: 0-14), and NOSE score was 5.91±4.84 (range: 0-18). All patients (100%) had maxillary sinus involvement. Ethmoidal sinus involvement was present in 57% of patients, frontal sinus involvement in 33% and sphenoidal sinus involvement in 27%. Morphologically, 40 patients (40%) had septal deviation, 41 (41%) had maxillary sinus retention cyst and 78 (78%) had hypertrophy of the conchae. No correlations were found between morphological abnormalities, quantitative values and patient scores in none of the questionnaires. Incidental morphological abnormalities or restricted diffusion of the paranasal sinuses on MRI do not correlate with the degree of symptoms in patients with incidentally detected inflammatory sinonasal disease.

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