Abstract
In intensive care units (ICUs), critically ill patients may be exposed to several risk factors for developing acute rhinosinusitis, including nasogastric tubes, mechanical ventilation, and prolonged periods in the supine position. The incidence of acute rhinosinusitis can be as high as 83%, the third or fourth most frequent ICU infection and it increases the risk of developing ventilator-associated pneumonia. Diagnosis and therapeutic approaches should be more aggressive than in non-ICU patients. Antral puncture plays a central role in the diagnosis and treatment of these patients. This study was designed to show the development of a method for sphenoid puncture in the diagnosis and treatment of acute infectious rhinosinusitis in critically ill patients, analyzing safety and complications. Patients in ICUs with endoscopic and radiological diagnosis of acute rhinosinusitis were included. Maxillary puncture was performed through the inferior meatus; sphenoid puncture was performed by endoscopic identification of the sphenoethmoidal recess. An aspiration probe was introduced into the natural sphenoidal ostium, followed by aspiration of secretions and saline irrigation. Twenty-nine patients were included. Twenty-seven patients (93.1%) presented with sphenoidal sinusitis, 24 patients (82.7%) had maxillary sinusitis, 21 patients (72.4%) had ethmoidal sinusitis, and 13 patients (44.8%) had frontal sinusitis. Forty-seven sphenoidal and 39 maxillary punctures were performed. No major bleeding or other complications were recorded. The sphenoid puncture is a possible procedure to be performed in an ICU and might complement the paranasal puncture in cases of acute rhinosinusitis.
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