Acute sinusitis. When--and when not--to prescribe antibiotics
- PMID: 14755871
- DOI: 10.3810/pgm.2004.01.1415
Acute sinusitis. When--and when not--to prescribe antibiotics
Abstract
Clinical diagnosis of acute sinusitis is troublesome because it involves use of a cluster of diagnostic criteria that have only moderate sensitivity. Ancillary testing with radiography or antral puncture is impractical, expensive, and usually unnecessary in the primary care setting. Antibiotic therapy is not beneficial for most patients in whom acute sinusitis is suspected, even when radiographic abnormalities are found. Simple management algorithms and patient information are now available to aid primary care physicians in offering appropriate therapeutic measures and reassuring patients who are expecting "'a pill for every ill' when that pill is an antibacterial."
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical