
Sinusitis, or inflammation
of the lining of the sinuses, is one if the most common medical
ailments in the United States, affecting some 31 million adults
annually. The sinuses are air filled cavities within the bones
of the face and skull that communicate with the nose through
tiny openings. The openings allow air to enter the sinus, and
the mucus that is produced by the sinus lining to exit into the
nose.
Sinusitis is a condition that significantly affects the
quality of life of its sufferers, causing pain, airway obstruction
and discharge, alteration of smell and flavor senses and headache.
Rarely, extension of the inflammation can involve the brain
or eye, causing blindness, neurologic injury or even death.
Sinusitis a major cause of US health care expenditures for
OTC and prescription drugs, physician services and hospital
care, estimated to be $3.30 billion in direct expenditures
and $5.8 billion in total expenditures in 1996. This has almost
certainly increased since then.
What Causes Sinusitis?
For many decades doctors thought that most cases of sinusitis
in its chronic form were the result of persistent infection.
However, it is now recognized that chronic rhinosinusitis,
as it is better termed, exists in at least two forms. The
first considers the disorder to be a systemic problem due
to a malfunction of the immune system. This condition often
accompanies asthma. In the second form, there are local
factors that lead to recurrent or persistent sinus infections.

Many
diseases are associated with chronic rhinosinusitis.
However, the detection of a specific cause is often a daunting
task in a particular patient. The most commonly assumed
factors that perpetuate the sinusitis are allergies, bacterial
infections
and fungal infection or contamination. Other important
factors include anatomic deformities of the nose and sinuses,
malfunctions
of the flow of mucus, endocrine disorders such as thyroid
disease and diabetes, reduced immunity, injuries, medication
effects,
chemical irritation of the nasal lining and previous surgery.
Although there is good reason to believe that infections
and allergies play some role, it may be in form of strengthening
the inflammation, rather than originating it. This concept
is reinforced by the fact that appropriate and prolonged
antibiotics
and allergy immunotherapy do not cure the majority of cases
of chronic sinusitis.
A special subset of chronic rhinosinusitis
is that form accompanied by severe polyps extending into
and sometimes filling the nasal
cavity. Polyps represent severely swollen lining from the
sinus and nasal wall that obstructs, sometimes completely,
the nose
and sinuses. Chronic allergic aspergillosis (a fungal overgrowth)
of the sinuses as well as aspirin hypersensitivity asthma
(Samter’s
triad) are both associated with extensive polyps, indicating
that disturbances in regulation of inflammation are capable
of causing polyps. The fact that complete surgical removal
of the polyps and infection often is followed by the rapid
return of polyps would indicate that some sort of malfunction
in the control of inflammation, rather that the mere presence
of bacteria or anatomic factors, underlies the development
of chronic polypoid rhinosinusitis. This is further strengthened
by the complete suppression of polyp formation with high
dose systemic cortisone.
How is Sinusitis Treated?
With the frequent failure of medical treatments, surgical
procedures have been widely used to treat rhinosinusitis.
These operations
were originally invented in the nineteenth century as
drainage procedures for acute, pus forming infections of
the sinuses,
and they were mainly used only in life threatening cases.
The extension of these drainage operations to treat chronic
rhinosinusitis came in the twentieth century. Their current
form, called functional endoscopic sinus surgery,was
spurred by technologic advances that joined improvements
in endoscopic
instrumentation with detailed sinus x-ray images in provided
by CT scans of the sinuses. Dr. Kimmelman has performed
this kind of surgery for almost 20 years. He and other
leaders
in the field have shown that endoscopic sinus surgery
certainly does benefit chronic rhinosinusitis caused by
anatomic abnormalities,
isolated fungal accretions (fungus balls), injuries,
dental disorders and congenital malformations. However,
not all
cases of chronic rhinosinusitis are completely and permanently
cured on a long term basis by these procedures alone.
The underlying immune mechanisms and systemic factors are
unchanged
by the surgical operation.
There is a growing consensus that
the control of the inflammation is the prime critical element
in the treatment of sinusitis.
Infections from bacterial or fungal organisms, allergy
and other inflammatory conditions, such as autoimmune
disease,
may play a role in the majority of cases.
This lack of a clear
understanding of the underlying causes of chronic rhinosinusitis
has hampered attempts to devise effective
treatments. Indeed, the major pharmaceutical firms have
not chosen
to target chronic rhinosinusitis as an FDA approved market
for their drugs because of their lack of proven effectiveness.
Doctors have been therefore forced to use many drugs and
treatments
without clear scientific evidence of benefit. As a result
of the presence of multiple factors, the final common pathway
of inflammation is a reasonable target for treatment. Oral
(pills), nasally injected (with a needle) and topical (inhaled)
cortisone like medicines are the most commonly utilized
anti-inflammatory drugs. Washing out the nose with various
salt water solutions
is used to clean out thick or crusted secretions contaminated
with organisms. Topical decongestants (like Afrin™) can
be used for short durations, and systemic decongestants (like
Sudafed™) may be employed for longer periods with some
slight benefit to drainage. Antihistamines are helpful in “drying
up” allergies, but their contribution is hampered by
the fact that thick, dry secretions are more likely to become
colonized by bacteria, which leads to even more inflammation.
Other medicines, such as Singulair™, are appealing
because of their interference with known inflammatory mediators;
however,
since there are many other signals that sustain inflammation,
these drugs have not had a major impact on chronic rhinosinusitis.
Why
is Chronic Sinusitis so Hard to Treat?
Biofilm formation by microorganisms in the mucus blanket
allows organisms to flaunt the efforts of the immune system
and
antibiotics to eliminate them. Biofilms are a state of
bacterial life characterized by the formation of a starch-like
barrier
to protect the encased organisms, which slow down their
metabolic and growth behavior as well. Most sinus infections
are associated
with biofilm formation.Ehrle Antiadhesion substances,
such as xylitol, show promise in preventing the attachment
of
organisms before they can form biofilms. In the future
more sophisticated drugs that stop chemical signaling (“quorum” sensing)
among microbes may reduce the formation of biofilms.
