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. 2001 Jun;30(21):1049-54.

[Acute sinusitus in adults. Management by general practitioners]

[Article in French]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 11471276

[Acute sinusitus in adults. Management by general practitioners]

[Article in French]
P A Ferrand et al. Presse Med. 2001 Jun.

Abstract

Objective: Acute sinusitis is a common condition encountered in general practice and raises the question of appropriate management. Sufficient data are still lacking in the literature to provide a fully satisfactory response.

Methods: We conducted a survey among 193 physicians representative of the general practitioners in France to collect 755 cases of acute sinusitis treated in the outpatient setting from January 6 through March 15, 1999. We recorded clinical features and therapeutic management.

Results: Pain was the predominant clinical sign (97% of the patients). Facial pain with a highly suggestive localization and aggravated by pressure and headache were the most frequent. Most of the patients also had a nasal symptom (77%) and an infectious context (90%). Three circumstances had been pre-defined by the experts: unique acute sinusitis, acute episode of chronic sinusitis, and recurrent acute sinusitis. In 67% of the cases of unique acute sinusitis, the diagnosis of the general practitioner was confirmed a posterori by the experts. Few complementary tests were ordered (in 17% of the patients) mainly in fragile patients and mainly limited to a radiography of the sinus (81% of the complementary tests ordered). An oral antibiotic was almost always prescribed (96% of the patients) although antibiotics comprised only 29% of all prescriptions. General corticosteroid therapy (41%), local treatment (73%) and anti-cough or expectoration medications (52%) were also prescribed. Despite the painful nature of sinusitis, analgesics were only prescribed for 36% of the patients.

Conclusion: This observational survey enabled us to describe the diagnostic and therapeutic strategy used by French general practitioners for acute sinusitis in adults. There was general agreement on the strategy that was well adapted to the patient profiles. An evaluation of the different classes of drugs prescribed, and their efficacy in the outpatient setting, that remains to be determined, was not however attempted.

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