Trans 54 and 55 Paranasal and Nose Flashcards

1
Q

in the nose, Upper 1/3 consists of bones which are (3)

while lower 1/3 is composed of?

A

 2 nasal bones
 Frontal process of maxilla
 Nasal notch of frontal bone

Cartilage

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2
Q

lower lateral cartilage + nasal septal cartilage =

A

ALA

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3
Q

superior and middle turbinates are part of _________ bone

 inferior turbinate is __________ bone

A

Ethmoid bone;

separate bone

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4
Q

lining epithelium of Upper 1/3 of the nasal cavity?

A

• Upper 1/3 – olfactory epithelium
 Specialized sensory epithelium. Same epithelium with respiratory but without goblet cells. It starts from the superior turbinate.

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5
Q

lining epithelium of lower 2/3 of nasal cavity

A

Lower 2/3 pseudostratified columnar ciliated epithelium

 With goblet cells also with respiratory epithelium

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6
Q

lining epithelium of the vestibule

A

Vestibule – stratified squamous keratinizing epithelium

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7
Q

lining epithelium of the sinuses?

A

cuboidal ciliated

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8
Q

located at the antero-inferior part of the septum which is a confluence of arteries.

A

Kiesselbach’s plexus or Little’s area

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9
Q
 No opening
• Usually located at the bony-cartilaginous junction of the nasal dorsum
• Contain all elements of skin: hair, sweat glands, sebaceous glands, connective tissue
• Non-compressible, non-pulsatile
• Diagnosis:
o CT Scan
• Treatment:
o Surgical excision
A

NASAL DERMOID CYST

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10
Q

• Connected to the CNS
• Frequently associated with other midline fusion defects (cleft lip, cleft palate)
• Extracranial herniation of meninges and brain
• Bluish, compressible, pulsatile
(+) Furstenberg’s sign
Diagnosis:
o CT Scan “for confirmation – connection with the brain
• Treatment:
o Surgery

A

Nasal encephalocele

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11
Q

enlargement on compression of the jugular

A

(+) Furstenberg’s sign

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12
Q
• Solid
• Non-compressible, non-pulsatile gray or purple mass
• (-) Furstenberg’s sign
• Diagnosis:
o CT Scan
A

Nasal Glioma

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13
Q

acute vs chronic rhinosinusitis?

A
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14
Q

acute vs chronic rhinosinusitis?

A

• Acute rhinosinusitis:
o >10 days, <12 weeks with complete resolution of symptoms
• Chronic rhinosinusitis:
o >12 weeks without complete resolution of symptoms

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15
Q

Etiology: most of the time, bacterial sinusitis follows after a course of viral sinusitis. Typical pathogens include

A

o Streptococcus pneumonia
o Haemophilus influenza
o Moraxella catarrhalis
o Staphylococcus aureus

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16
Q
o PE
▪ Anterior Rhinoscopy/Nasal endoscopy:
• pale, bluish-grey,
• boggy turbinates
• minimal to profuse, watery to mucoid nasal discharge

what disease entity?

A

ALLERGIC RHINITIS

17
Q

Pharmacotherapy for Allergic Rhinitis

A

▪ Antihistamines: for early phase reaction
 E.g. loratadine, cetirizine
 Blocks histamine receptors
▪ Pseudoephedrine: for decongestion
▪ Intranasal corticosteroids: for early and late phase reaction.

18
Q

What type of non allergic rhinitis?

  • Patient usually have no history of allergens, and there are no signs of infection
  • Symptoms may be exacerbated by temperature changes, strong odors, stress, and exposure to variety of irritants.
A

Vasomotor rhinitis

19
Q
  • Usually caused by Upper Respiratory viral infection
  • Tends to resolve after infection run its course
  • Nasal discharge is clear or mucopurulent, rather than watery

what form of non allergic rhinitis?

A

Infectious rhinitis

20
Q
  • Experienced only in workplace
  • Thought to result from exposure irritants
  • May present with concomitant occupational asthma

What form of non allergic rhinitis?

A

Occupational rhinitis

21
Q
  • Associated with hormonal imbalance and hypothyroidism
  • Most common during puberty, menstruation, pregnancy and with use of hormonal therapies

what type of non allergic rhinitis?

A

Hormonal rhinitis

22
Q
  • Many drug types have been implicated
  • A subtype, rhinitis medicamentosa, is caused by prolonged use of topical decongestants

what type of non allergic rhinitis?

A

Drug-induced rhinitis

23
Q

Usually occurs after ingesting hot or spicy foods or alcohol
• Characterized by profuse watery rhinorrhea

what type of non allergic rhinitis?

A

Gustatory rhinitis

24
Q

NARES vs BENARES? (non allergic rhinitis with esonophilia syndrome; blood eosinophilia nares)

A
  • NARES: nasal smears show >5% to >20% eosinophils;
  • BENARES: No nasal eosinophilia but elevated serum eosinophil levels
  • NARES: estimated to account for 20% of rhinitis diagnoses
  • NARES/BENARES: Patients at high risk of developing aspirin sensitivity, nasal polyps, sinusitis, and asthma
25
Q

▪ Presence of two or more of the following symptoms:
• Nasal blockage/ Obstriction/ Congestion
• Nasal discharge (anterior/posterior nasal drip)
• Facial pain/ pressure
• Reduction or loss of smell
▪ Duration of greater than or equal 12 weeks
▪ Presence of any of the following objective findings:
• Mucopurulent discharge from the middle meatus
• Nasal polyps
• Edema/ mucosal obstruction in the middle meatus
• Radiographic imaging showing mucosal changes
within the ostiomeatal complex and/or sinuses.

these are criteria of?

A

CHRONIC RHINOSINUSITIS

26
Q

postulates that when gases or fluids pass through a constricted area, a negative pressure may develop in the vicinity of constriction. The lowered pressure leads to an increased formation of tissue fluid and subsequent Polyp formation.

A

Bernoulli phenomenon

27
Q

Nasal polyp score

A

0 - no polyps
1 - small polyps in the middle meatus
2 - reaching below the lower border of middle turbinate
3 - large polyp reaching the lower border of inf turbinate
4 - large polyp causing complete obstruction of the inferior nasal cavity

28
Q

Grade 1 and grade 2 nasal polyp treatment?

A

corticosteroids (mometasone and Avamys)

29
Q

grade 3 and grade 4 nasal polyp treatment?

A

advise functional endoscopic sinus surgery