• Home
  • Practice Focus
    • Facial Plastic/Reconstructive
    • Head and Neck
    • Laryngology
    • Otology/Neurotology
    • Pediatric
    • Rhinology
    • Sleep Medicine
    • How I Do It
    • TRIO Best Practices
  • Business of Medicine
    • Health Policy
    • Legal Matters
    • Practice Management
    • Tech Talk
    • AI
  • Literature Reviews
    • Facial Plastic/Reconstructive
    • Head and Neck
    • Laryngology
    • Otology/Neurotology
    • Pediatric
    • Rhinology
    • Sleep Medicine
  • Career
    • Medical Education
    • Professional Development
    • Resident Focus
  • ENT Perspectives
    • ENT Expressions
    • Everyday Ethics
    • From TRIO
    • The Great Debate
    • Letter From the Editor
    • Rx: Wellness
    • The Voice
    • Viewpoint
  • TRIO Resources
    • Triological Society
    • The Laryngoscope
    • Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
    • TRIO Combined Sections Meetings
    • COSM
    • Related Otolaryngology Events
  • Search

Toward Better Outcomes: Avoid revision surgeries in chronic rhinosinusitis patients

by Mary Beth Nierengarten • January 1, 2010

  • Tweet
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Print-Friendly Version

For many patients with chronic rhinosinusitis, functional endoscopic sinus surgery (FESS) has provided much needed relief from a condition that, by its daily aggravation, can significantly reduce quality of life.

You Might Also Like

  • Chronic Rhinosinusitis Symptom Duration Does Not Affect ESS Outcomes
  • Integrated Approach Key to Evaluating Recalcitrant Rhinosinusitis Patients
  • The Etiology of Chronic Rhinosinusitis Remains Unclear
  • Report May Change Diagnosis, Management of Chronic Rhinosinusitis
Explore This Issue
January 2010

In some patients, however, symptom relief is not achieved even after surgery, or the disease recurs and patients must return for revision surgery. What are the main reasons for revision surgery? How can it be avoided?

Answering these questions is anything but straightforward. A failed surgery in one patient’s eyes may be a success in another’s, and strict criteria for defining what success or failure means clinically are somewhat arbitrary given that the outcome desired—improved quality of life—is not an exact quantifiable outcome.

Despite this ambiguity, experts point to two primary reasons sinus surgery fails. “The two main reasons for FESS failure are doctor-related and patient-related,” said Robert Kern, MD, chief of rhinology at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Ill. In other words, failure results from issues related to the surgical technique and issues related to the chronic nature of the disease.

Surgical Technique

Most of the reasons sinus surgery fails relate to incomplete surgery, according to James Palmer, MD, director of the Division of Rhinology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. “The biggest improvement in FESS surgery is the understanding that complete surgery improves outcomes,” he said. Partial surgery, which includes incomplete removal of all bony partitions and incomplete opening of the sinuses, may lead to a worse result, he said.

According to Dr. Kern, opening up all the sinus cells is particularly critical for patients with extensive disease. “If a patient has nasal polyposis, a complete ethmoidectomy will give the best outcomes,” he said, emphasizing that strong surgical skill is required for this.

Agreeing that surgical skill is key to opening up all the sinus cells and that this is critical to improved outcomes, Lanny Garth Close, MD, chairman of the department of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery at Columbia University in New York, said that some surgeons shy away from opening certain sinus cells, particularly in the areas of the eye and brain, because of the increased potential for morbidity in these areas. “Often, surgeons feel that it is better to leave some cells untouched rather than harm the patient,” he said, despite the potential for a lower success rate.

If the surgeon strips the mucosal out inadvertently, two things will happen that will lead to absolute failure—the opening will scar over or, even worse, new bone formation will close the area off.
—Lanny Garth Close, MD

Although Dr. Close believes that complete removal of all bony partitions (i.e., complete surgery) leads to the best long-term results, other surgeons lean toward only opening those cells that show up on imaging as diseased. “Most patients probably do not require every sinus opened,” said Martin Citardi, MD, chair of the department of Otorhinolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery at the University of Texas Medical School at Houston, adding that the surgery only needs to be comprehensive enough to deal with the disease at hand.

Pages: 1 2 3 | Single Page

Filed Under: Departments, Medical Education, Practice Focus, Rhinology Tagged With: functional endoscopic sinus surgery, outcomes, rhinosinusitis, Sinusitis, surgery, techniqueIssue: January 2010

You Might Also Like:

  • Chronic Rhinosinusitis Symptom Duration Does Not Affect ESS Outcomes
  • Integrated Approach Key to Evaluating Recalcitrant Rhinosinusitis Patients
  • The Etiology of Chronic Rhinosinusitis Remains Unclear
  • Report May Change Diagnosis, Management of Chronic Rhinosinusitis

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

The Triological SocietyENTtoday is a publication of The Triological Society.

Polls

Would you choose a concierge physician as your PCP?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...
  • Polls Archive

Top Articles for Residents

  • Applications Open for Resident Members of ENTtoday Edit Board
  • How To Provide Helpful Feedback To Residents
  • Call for Resident Bowl Questions
  • New Standardized Otolaryngology Curriculum Launching July 1 Should Be Valuable Resource For Physicians Around The World
  • Do Training Programs Give Otolaryngology Residents the Necessary Tools to Do Productive Research?
  • Popular this Week
  • Most Popular
  • Most Recent
    • A Journey Through Pay Inequity: A Physician’s Firsthand Account

    • The Dramatic Rise in Tongue Tie and Lip Tie Treatment

    • Otolaryngologists Are Still Debating the Effectiveness of Tongue Tie Treatment

    • Rating Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Severity: How Do Two Common Instruments Compare?

    • Is Middle Ear Pressure Affected by Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Use?

    • The Dramatic Rise in Tongue Tie and Lip Tie Treatment

    • Rating Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Severity: How Do Two Common Instruments Compare?

    • Is Middle Ear Pressure Affected by Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Use?

    • Otolaryngologists Are Still Debating the Effectiveness of Tongue Tie Treatment

    • Complications for When Physicians Change a Maiden Name

    • Excitement Around Gene Therapy for Hearing Restoration
    • “Small” Acts of Kindness
    • How To: Endoscopic Total Maxillectomy Without Facial Skin Incision
    • Science Communities Must Speak Out When Policies Threaten Health and Safety
    • Observation Most Cost-Effective in Addressing AECRS in Absence of Bacterial Infection

Follow Us

  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • The Triological Society
  • The Laryngoscope
  • Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookies

Wiley

Copyright © 2025 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies. ISSN 1559-4939