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Hospital-acquired sinusitis is a common cause of fever of unknown origin in orotracheally intubated critically ill patients

INTRODUCTION: Sinusitis is a well recognised but insufficiently understood complication of critical illness. It has been linked to nasotracheal intubation, but its occurrence after orotracheal intubation is less clear. We studied the incidence of sinusitis in patients with fever of unknown origin (F...

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Autores principales: van Zanten, Arthur RH, Dixon, J Mark, Nipshagen, Martine D, de Bree, Remco, Girbes, Armand RJ, Polderman, Kees H
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1297630/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16277722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc3805
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author van Zanten, Arthur RH
Dixon, J Mark
Nipshagen, Martine D
de Bree, Remco
Girbes, Armand RJ
Polderman, Kees H
author_facet van Zanten, Arthur RH
Dixon, J Mark
Nipshagen, Martine D
de Bree, Remco
Girbes, Armand RJ
Polderman, Kees H
author_sort van Zanten, Arthur RH
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Sinusitis is a well recognised but insufficiently understood complication of critical illness. It has been linked to nasotracheal intubation, but its occurrence after orotracheal intubation is less clear. We studied the incidence of sinusitis in patients with fever of unknown origin (FUO) in our intensive care unit with the aim of establishing a protocol that would be applicable in everyday clinical practice. METHODS: Sinus X-rays (SXRs) were performed in all patients with fever for which an initial screening (physical examination, microbiological cultures and chest X-ray) revealed no obvious cause. All patients were followed with a predefined protocol, including antral drainage in all patients with abnormal or equivocal results on their SXR. RESULTS: Initial screening revealed probable causes of fever in 153 of 351 patients (43.6%). SXRs were taken in the other 198 patients (56.4%); 129 had obvious or equivocal abnormalities. Sinus drainage revealed purulent material and positive cultures (predominantly Pseudomonas and Klebsiella species) in 84 patients. Final diagnosis for the cause of fever in all 351 patients based on X-ray results, microbiological cultures, and clinical response to sinus drainage indicated sinusitis as the sole cause of fever in 57 (16.2%) and as contributing factor in 48 (13.8%) patients with FUO. This will underestimate the actual incidence because SXR and drainage were not performed in all patients. CONCLUSION: Physicians treating critically ill patients should be aware of the high risk of sinusitis and take appropriate preventive measures, including the removal of nasogastric tubes in patients requiring long-term mechanical ventilation. Routine investigation of FUO should include computed tomography scan, SXR or sinus ultrasonography, and drainage should be performed if any abnormalities are found.
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spelling pubmed-12976302005-12-01 Hospital-acquired sinusitis is a common cause of fever of unknown origin in orotracheally intubated critically ill patients van Zanten, Arthur RH Dixon, J Mark Nipshagen, Martine D de Bree, Remco Girbes, Armand RJ Polderman, Kees H Crit Care Research INTRODUCTION: Sinusitis is a well recognised but insufficiently understood complication of critical illness. It has been linked to nasotracheal intubation, but its occurrence after orotracheal intubation is less clear. We studied the incidence of sinusitis in patients with fever of unknown origin (FUO) in our intensive care unit with the aim of establishing a protocol that would be applicable in everyday clinical practice. METHODS: Sinus X-rays (SXRs) were performed in all patients with fever for which an initial screening (physical examination, microbiological cultures and chest X-ray) revealed no obvious cause. All patients were followed with a predefined protocol, including antral drainage in all patients with abnormal or equivocal results on their SXR. RESULTS: Initial screening revealed probable causes of fever in 153 of 351 patients (43.6%). SXRs were taken in the other 198 patients (56.4%); 129 had obvious or equivocal abnormalities. Sinus drainage revealed purulent material and positive cultures (predominantly Pseudomonas and Klebsiella species) in 84 patients. Final diagnosis for the cause of fever in all 351 patients based on X-ray results, microbiological cultures, and clinical response to sinus drainage indicated sinusitis as the sole cause of fever in 57 (16.2%) and as contributing factor in 48 (13.8%) patients with FUO. This will underestimate the actual incidence because SXR and drainage were not performed in all patients. CONCLUSION: Physicians treating critically ill patients should be aware of the high risk of sinusitis and take appropriate preventive measures, including the removal of nasogastric tubes in patients requiring long-term mechanical ventilation. Routine investigation of FUO should include computed tomography scan, SXR or sinus ultrasonography, and drainage should be performed if any abnormalities are found. BioMed Central 2005 2005-09-13 /pmc/articles/PMC1297630/ /pubmed/16277722 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc3805 Text en Copyright © 2005 van Zanten et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
spellingShingle Research
van Zanten, Arthur RH
Dixon, J Mark
Nipshagen, Martine D
de Bree, Remco
Girbes, Armand RJ
Polderman, Kees H
Hospital-acquired sinusitis is a common cause of fever of unknown origin in orotracheally intubated critically ill patients
title Hospital-acquired sinusitis is a common cause of fever of unknown origin in orotracheally intubated critically ill patients
title_full Hospital-acquired sinusitis is a common cause of fever of unknown origin in orotracheally intubated critically ill patients
title_fullStr Hospital-acquired sinusitis is a common cause of fever of unknown origin in orotracheally intubated critically ill patients
title_full_unstemmed Hospital-acquired sinusitis is a common cause of fever of unknown origin in orotracheally intubated critically ill patients
title_short Hospital-acquired sinusitis is a common cause of fever of unknown origin in orotracheally intubated critically ill patients
title_sort hospital-acquired sinusitis is a common cause of fever of unknown origin in orotracheally intubated critically ill patients
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1297630/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16277722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc3805
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