1 / 25

ENT JOURNAL READING: Predictors of Olfactory Dysfunction in Patients With Chronic Rhinosinusitis

ENT JOURNAL READING: Predictors of Olfactory Dysfunction in Patients With Chronic Rhinosinusitis. Laryngoscope, 118:2225–2230, 2008 Supervisor 侯友益 R 陳芝瑜. INTRODUCTION. Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a common cause of olfactory dysfunction.(14%-30%) Etiology : Multifactorial

kitra
Download Presentation

ENT JOURNAL READING: Predictors of Olfactory Dysfunction in Patients With Chronic Rhinosinusitis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ENT JOURNAL READING:Predictors of Olfactory Dysfunction in Patients With Chronic Rhinosinusitis Laryngoscope, 118:2225–2230, 2008 Supervisor 侯友益 R 陳芝瑜

  2. INTRODUCTION • Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a common cause of olfactory dysfunction.(14%-30%) • Etiology : Multifactorial • Conductive mechanisms • Mechanical obstruction by nasal polyposis and respiratory mucosal edema • Sensorineural mechanisms • Direct inflammation of the olfactory neuroepithelium • clinical response to systemic corticosteroids

  3. INTRODUCTION • Objectives: • To measure the prevalence of and identify clinical characteristics associated with poor olfactory function in a patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS). • help to inform clinicians which patients are at highest risk for olfactory dysfunction and in need of patient safety counseling and further treatment.

  4. INTRODUCTION • Study Design • Multi-institutional, cross sectional analysis

  5. MATERIALS AND METHODS • Study Population and Data Collection • 3-year period, 3 tertiary care centers • N= 367, age >=18 years • All patients had a diagnosis of CRS based on the Rhinosinusitis Task Force criteria • Variables included: • age, gender, current tobacco use, prior sinus surgery, nasal polyposis, asthma, allergic rhinitis confirmed by allergy testing, acetylsalicylic acid intolerance, septal deviation, and inferior turbinate hypertrophy

  6. MATERIALS AND METHODS • Study Population and Data Collection • Exclude: • younger than 18 years • immunodeficiency (n=5) • autoimmune disease (n=8) • and/or cystic fibrosis (n =12) • olfactory test scores consistent with malingering (score<=5) (n= 4)

  7. MATERIALS AND METHODS • Measurement of Olfactory Function • Smell Identification Test (SIT): • total score: 0–40(40 question forced-choice test) • high test-retest reliability (r >0.90)

  8. MATERIALS AND METHODS • Statistical Analyses • SPSS v15.0 statistical software • Data were analyzed using univariate and multivariate analyses.

  9. RESULTS

  10. Acetylsalicylic acid intolerance, allergic rhinitis, and/or prior sinus surgery: neither increased nor decreased risk of olfactory dysfunction

  11. DISCUSSION

  12. Associated with olfactory dysfunction: • Age> 65 years • Nasal polyposis • Asthma • Smoking • Notsignificantly associated: • Aspirin intolerance • Allergic rhinitis • History of prior sinus surgery • Gender • Normal olfactory function • septal deviation • inferior turbinate hypertrophy

  13. Chronic rhinosinusitis V.S olfactory dysfunction • Conductive disorder? • Sensorineural process? • Clinical cofactors?

  14. Age • Rats • increased proapoptotic gene expression • increased olfactory receptor neuron cell death • Patients • Inflammation in the olfactory mucosa may inhibit olfactory neurogenesis. • “two-hit” fashion

  15. Smoking • Cumulative dose of smoking and time since last cigarette • Frye et al. • current smokers are 1.9 times as likely to have olfactory dysfunction as never smokers • Bias • quantity of cigarettes / time since last cigarette

  16. Nasal polyposis • Obstruction of the airway • Degenerative changes • Recurrent infections • Scarring • Chronic nasal medication use • Perry and Kountakis, Vento et al

  17. Asthma • Systemic inflammatory responses of the upper and the lower airway. • May affect the olfactory cleft

  18. Allergic rhinitis • High flow areas of the nasal airway, such as the inferior turbinate and middle meatus • Our findings suggest that lower flow areas, such as the olfactory cleft, are less affected • Simola and Malmberg • nonallergic rhinitis patients had a poorer sense of smell than patients with seasonal or perennial allergic rhinitis

  19. History of prior sinus surgery • Proposed to cause olfactory injury • direct injury to the olfactory epithelium, modification of airflow… • Adjusted for in the multivariate logistic regression model • History of surgery for nasal polyposis was associated with poor olfactory function but a history of surgery for chronic maxillary sinusitis was not. • Underlying medical comorbidity (nasal polyposis) contributed to the olfactory dysfunction rather than the surgery.

  20. Aspirin intolerant • Patients with aspirin intolerance frequently suffer from olfactory dysfunction although we were unable to detect it. • Relatively small number patients.

  21. Septal deviation and inferior turbinate hypertrophy • Both diagnoses were determined by the clinician, they are subjective in nature and susceptible to potential bias.

  22. CONCLUSION • Associated with olfactory dysfunction: • Age> 65 years • Nasal polyposis • Asthma • Smoking • Not significantly associated: • Aspirin intolerance • Allergic rhinitis • History of prior sinus surgery • Gender • Normal olfactory function • septal deviation • inferior turbinate hypertrophy

  23. THANK YOU!

More Related