NOTE: Highlighted in bold are the important key info!
Topics are arranged in order of most to least commonly tested
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Rhinosinusitis (Acute & Chronic)
Acute Rhinosinusitis:
Most common cause overall: Viral (>90%), often Rhinovirus.
Viral typically presents with watery discharge, low-grade fever, and resolves spontaneously without antibiotics within 7-10 days.
Supportive treatment (decongestants, bed rest, painkillers) is key for viral RS.
Bacterial: Less common (0.5-2%), often secondary to viral infection.
Most common bacteria: Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis.
Suggestive features: Symptoms > 7-10 days, worsening after initial improvement ("double sickening"), high fever, purulent discharge.
First-line antibiotic: Amoxicillin with clavulanic acid.
Imaging (X-ray, CT) is generally not needed for uncomplicated acute sinusitis diagnosis.
Sinus puncture is the gold standard for diagnosis but rarely performed.
Location-specific pain:
Maxillary: Jaw/dental pain.
Ethmoidal: Pain between the eyes / nasal bridge. (Common in younger children).
Frontal: Lower forehead pain.
Sphenoidal: Retro-orbital or vertex pain.
Chronic Rhinosinusitis:
Symptoms include purulent discharge, nasal obstruction, facial pain/pressure, hyposmia. Lasts for 12 weeks or more. Nasal polyps (1/3 of chronic cases) is usually associated with aspirin intake or asthma patients (eosinophilic)
Diagnosis often involves CT scan and endoscopy.
Specific Infective Chronic Rhinosinusitis: Caused by TB, Syphilis, etc. (granulomatous). Diagnosis via biopsy/culture. Septal perforation site may indicate cause (anterior=TB, posterior=Syphilis).
Allergic rhinitis → IgE/Type 1 hypersensitivity, most sensitive test (gold standard) is nasal challenge test, most effective treatment is desensitization, most important is to avoid the allergen. Most common form of Chronic Rhinosinusitis
Sinusitis Complications:
Most common: Orbital complications (especially from ethmoiditis due to thin lamina papyracea). Includes orbital cellulitis, subperiosteal abscess, orbital abscess.
Intracranial: Meningitis, abscesses (epidural, subdural, intracerebral), cavernous sinus thrombosis. Most common IC complication is subdural abscess related to frontal sinusitis
Bony: Osteomyelitis (e.g., Pott's puffy tumour of frontal bone).
Hearing Loss & Assessment
Types of Hearing Loss:
Conductive Hearing Loss (CHL): Problem in external or middle ear.
Tuning Forks: Rinne negative (BC>AC), Weber lateralizes to the affected ear.
Sensorineural Hearing Loss (SNHL): Problem in cochlea or auditory nerve/pathway.
Causes: Presbycusis, Noise exposure, Ototoxicity (e.g., aminoglycosides), Meniere's disease, Viral infections (Mumps=most common acquired SNHL cause in children, Measles), Meningitis, Acoustic neuroma, Trauma, Genetic syndromes.
Tuning Forks: Rinne positive (AC>BC), Weber lateralizes away from the affected ear.
Mixed Hearing Loss: Both CHL and SNHL components.
Presbycusis (Age-Related Hearing Loss):
Most common cause of SNHL in adults.
Characteristics: Bilateral, progressive, symmetric, high-frequency SNHL with a sloping audiogram pattern.
Often associated with tinnitus and difficulty hearing in noise.
Management: Hearing aids.
Hearing Assessment:
Neonate Screening:Auditory Brainstem Response (ABR) is the investigation of choice. Otoacoustic Emissions (OAE) are also used (screening tool, affected by middle ear status).
Tuning Fork Tests (Weber & Rinne): Used to differentiate CHL and SNHL. Use 512 Hz fork ideally.
See interpretation under CHL/SNHL above.
Audiometry: Pure Tone Audiometry (PTA), Tympanometry (assesses middle ear pressure/compliance - Type A=Normal, Type B=Flat/Effusion, Type C=Negative Pressure/ETD).
Pediatric Hearing Loss Risk Factors:
Family history, congenital infections (TORCH), meningitis, ototoxic drug exposure, hyperbilirubinemia, prematurity (<1500g), syndromes, craniofacial anomalies, head trauma, hypoxia.
History of Otitis Externa or Cesarean delivery are NOT risk factors.
Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma (NPC)
Most common site of origin: Fossa of Rosenmüller.
Presentation:
Most common presentation: Neck mass (cervical lymph node metastasis). Usually bilateral nodes.
Unilateral Otitis Media with Effusion (OME) in an adult is highly suspicious for NPC and must be ruled out. (Due to Eustachian tube obstruction).
Lateral: Branchial cleft cyst, Lymph nodes (inflammatory/malignant), Salivary gland tumors, Carotid body tumor, etc.
Stridor & Airway Obstruction
Stridor: High-pitched noise due to turbulent airflow through a narrowed airway.
Inspiratory: Supraglottic obstruction.
Expiratory: Intrathoracic/tracheal obstruction.
Biphasic: Glottic or Subglottic obstruction.
Congenital Stridor Causes:
Most common cause in infants: Laryngomalacia.
Due to delayed cartilage development -> soft, floppy supraglottic structures (omega-shaped epiglottis, short aryepiglottic folds).
Inspiratory stridor, worse when supine/crying, relieved by prone position/head extension.
Usually benign, self-limiting (improves by 1 year). Observation for mild/moderate cases. Severe cases may need supraglottoplasty or tracheostomy.
Vocal cord paralysis: Can be unilateral (weak cry, hoarseness, biphasic stridor) or bilateral (aphonia, severe stridor, respiratory distress - may need tracheostomy). Can be congenital (birth trauma, Arnold-Chiari) or acquired.
Laryngeal web: Incomplete recanalization of larynx. Usually glottic. Causes biphasic stridor and weak cry.
Epiglottitis: Bacterial (H. influenzae type B historically, now others too). Medical emergency. High fever, dysphagia, drooling, muffled voice, "tripod" position. Thumb sign on X-ray. (Note: This is ACQUIRED, not congenital).
Foreign body aspiration.
Laryngoedema, tumors, trauma.
Epistaxis
Anterior Epistaxis:
Most common site: Kiesselbach's plexus (Little's area) on the anteroinferior septum (90% of cases).
Common in children/young adults.
Usually caused by trauma (nose picking), inflammation, dryness.
Persistent TM perforation with chronic middle ear inflammation and discharge (otorrhea) > 2 weeks (or 6 weeks).
Most common persistent symptom: Painless otorrhea.
Types:
Tubotympanic (Safe): Central perforation, mucoid discharge (often profuse), no cholesteatoma, rare complications.
Atticoantral (Unsafe): Marginal or attic perforation, purulent, foul-smelling discharge (often scanty), cholesteatoma often present, granulation/polyps common, high risk of complications.
Hypoglossal nerve (CN XII) is NOT typically associated with referred otalgia.
Eustachian Tube: Connects middle ear to nasopharynx. Functions: Pressure equalization, drainage, protection. Dysfunction is key in OM pathogenesis.
Vertigo & Balance Disorders
Vertigo: Illusion of movement (self or surroundings).
Causes:
Peripheral (Inner ear/Vestibular nerve):
Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV): Most common cause overall. Short episodes triggered by head movements. Diagnosed with Dix-Hallpike maneuver. Treated with repositioning maneuvers (e.g., Epley).
Meniere's Disease: Triad of episodic vertigo, fluctuating SNHL, and tinnitus. Often preceded by aural fullness. Due to endolymphatic hydrops.
Vestibular Neuritis: Acute onset vertigo, nausea/vomiting, without hearing loss. Often follows viral illness. Labyrinthitis includes hearing loss.
Ototoxicity, trauma.
Central (Brainstem/Cerebellum): Stroke, Multiple Sclerosis, Tumors. Less common. Central nystagmus characteristics differ (non-fatiguing, vertical, direction-changing).
Epidemiology: Vertigo is more common in the elderly (>60 years).
Nystagmus:
Peripheral: Usually horizontal/rotatory, fatigable, suppressed by visual fixation.
Central: Can be vertical, non-fatigable, not suppressed by fixation.
Nasal Polyps: Benign growths from nasal/sinus mucosa.
Ethmoidal Polyps:Most common type. Usually bilateral, multiple, arise from ethmoid sinuses. Associated with allergy, asthma, aspirin sensitivity (Samter's triad), cystic fibrosis. Treatment: Medical (steroids), surgical (FESS). High recurrence.
Antrochoanal Polyp (ACP): Less common. Arises from maxillary sinus, grows into choana/nasopharynx. Usually unilateral, single. More common in adolescents/young adults. Often associated with infection. Treatment: Surgical excision. Low recurrence. Benign.
Nasal Furunculosis: Infection of a hair follicle in the nasal vestibule (lateral 1/3).
Usually Staphylococcus aureus.
Features: Severe localized pain, redness, swelling.
Treatment: Systemic anti-staphylococcal antibiotics (e.g., oral). Analgesics. Incision & drainage only if localized abscess forms.
Danger area: Risk of spread via valveless facial veins to cavernous sinus (Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis).
Nasal Foreign Body:
Common in children.
Classic presentation: Unilateral, foul-smelling nasal discharge. May have epistaxis or obstruction.
Must be assumed in a child with these symptoms until proven otherwise. Removal required.
Septal Hematoma:
Collection of blood between septal cartilage and perichondrium.
Usually result of nasal trauma.
Appearance: Bilateral (or unilateral) reddish/bluish, boggy swelling of septum.
Requires urgent incision and drainage followed by packing/sutures to prevent cartilage necrosis (saddle nose deformity) or septal abscess.
Symptoms: Severe, deep-seated, unrelenting otalgia (out of proportion to exam), persistent purulent otorrhea, headache.
Signs: Granulation tissue at the bony-cartilaginous junction of the EAC floor is characteristic. Cranial nerve palsies (especially CN VII) indicate advanced disease and poor prognosis.
Glottic (Vocal cords): Most common site (60%). Presents early with Hoarseness. Good prognosis due to limited lymphatics. T2 involves both cords or extends slightly.
Supraglottic: Presents later with dysphagia, odynophagia, referred otalgia, muffled voice, neck mass (early LN mets).
Subglottic: Rare (1%). Presents late with stridor/airway obstruction.
Laryngeal Trauma:
Can involve cartilage fracture, hematoma, mucosal tears.