Value of Antral Puncture in the Intensive Care Patient With Fever of Unknown Origin
Open Access
- 1 October 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Laryngoscope
- Vol. 110 (10) , 1702-1706
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005537-200010000-00025
Abstract
Objective To evaluate the use of maxillary sinus puncture as a routine diagnostic procedure to exclude or confirm purulent sinusitis in intensive care unit (ICU) patients presenting with fever or a septic state of unknown origin.Study Design Retrospective.Methods All patients admitted to the ICU at the University Hospital Ghent who required ENT examination to exclude acute sinusitis as possible cause of their otherwise inexplicable fever or septic state underwent maxillary sinus puncture via the inferior meatus. The results of clinical examination and the relation between the presence of foreign bodies (e.g., nasogastric tubes) and culture results from the middle meatus and sinuses were analyzed.Results One hundred five punctures were performed in 53 patients. Macroscopic purulent effusions were obtained from 25 and nonpurulent effusions from 19 sinuses. The presence of a nasogastric tube did not influence puncture results but significantly increased colonization of the middle meatus. Staphylococcus aureus and Gram‐negative agents were frequently cultured from sinus aspirates. Although purulent secretions often reveal no growth, most patients present with a multibacterial (40%) or monobacterial (28%) infection. Simple anterior rhinoscopy reduces the need for antral puncture. Only 8% of punctures in patients with a normal clinical examination were positive.Conclusions Antral puncture proves to be a simple, fast, safe, inexpensive, and effective procedure for immediate diagnosis of acute nosocomial sinusitis in ICU patients and is therefore recommended as first procedure in these patients, even when only minor clinical abnormalities are present.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bacteriology and -Lactamase Activity in Acute and Chronic Maxillary SinusitisJAMA Otolaryngology–Head & Neck Surgery, 1996
- Microbiology of nosocomial sinusitis in intensive care unit patientsJournal of Infection, 1995
- Influence of long-term oro- or nasotracheal intubation on nosocomial maxillary sinusitis and pneumoniaCritical Care Medicine, 1993
- Occult fever in surgical intensive care unit patients is seldom caused by sinusitisThe American Journal of Surgery, 1992
- Nosocomial sinusitis in ventilated patientsAnaesthesia, 1992
- Effect of nasogastric tubes on the nose and maxillary sinusCritical Care Medicine, 1991
- The effect of nasotracheal intubation on the paranasal sinuses: A prospective study of 434 intensive care patientsActa Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, 1991
- Nosocomial maxillary sinusitis during mechanical ventilation: A prospective comparison of orotracheal versus the nasotracheal route for intubationIntensive Care Medicine, 1990
- SINUSITIS IN INTENSIVE CARE UNIT PATIENTSThe Laryngoscope, 1985