Abstract
Primary care physicians are frequently confronted with patients suffering from symptoms of acute rhinosinusitis (RS), and may resort to antibiotic management guided by traditional treatment approaches or in response to patient expectations. Acute RS symptoms are now thought to be caused largely by host inflammatory responses and not solely by infectious agents as was once assumed. An increasing amount of evidence confirms that, for routine treatment of uncomplicated acute RS, antibiotics are of little or no benefit in most cases. Further, inappropriate prescription of antibiotics for acute RS contributes to the worsening problem of antibiotic resistance, puts patients at risk of unnecessary side effects, and drives up the cost of medical care. Therefore, treatment goals are shifting toward efforts to quell the inflammatory process in the sinuses and restore normal sinus functioning. Clinical studies with intranasal corticosteroids support their usefulness as monotherapy or adjunctive therapy in relieving symptoms of acute RS, and recently published treatment guidelines recommend their use as a general management measure for RS, with antibiotics reserved only for more severe cases when a bacterial aetiology is highly suspected. This changing paradigm reflects current understanding of acute RS pathophysiology, and addresses the need to curtail unnecessary antibiotic usage.
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