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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2016 Mar-Apr;30(2):83-8.
doi: 10.2500/ajra.2016.30.4284.

Cytofunctional changes in nasal ciliated cells in patients treated with hyaluronate after nasal surgery

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Cytofunctional changes in nasal ciliated cells in patients treated with hyaluronate after nasal surgery

Michele Cassano et al. Am J Rhinol Allergy. 2016 Mar-Apr.

Abstract

Background: Hyaluronic acid (HA) plays a significant role in tissue repair of mucosal surfaces and, consequently, in surgical injury remodelling of nasal mucosa.

Objective: To assess the effect of high-molecular-weight HA administered by aerosol on the morphofunctional recovery of ciliated cells damaged by surgical trauma.

Methods: A single-blind, prospective, randomized trial was carried out with 94 patients who were randomly assigned, after endoscopic turbinoplasty, either to treatment with nasal saline solution irrigation (control group, n = 47) or to treatment with nasal douches based on high concentration (9 mg) and high-molecular-weight sodium hyaluronate (active treatment group, n = 47). All the patients were evaluated by using nasal fiberendoscopy, mucociliary transport time, nasal cytologic test, and a visual analog scale in terms of symptoms before and at 2 and 4 weeks after surgery.

Results: Visual analog scale values were significantly lower in the active treatment (AT) group at week 2 regarding each individual symptom. Mucociliary transport time was significantly reduced in patients in the AT group but only 1 month after surgery. Both the percentage of cellular impairments and the number of cells with hyperchromatic supranuclear stria showed significant improvements in the AT group in all postsurgery evaluations (p < 0.05).

Conclusion: Intranasal use of sodium hyaluronate in patients who underwent functional nasal surgery improved both mucociliary clearance and nasal mucosa regeneration due to a faster recovery of the impaired ciliated cells.

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