December 02, 2011

In-Office Sinus Surgery Without General Anesthesia

There has been tremendous advances in sinus surgery over the past decade. From the elimination of nasal packing after most routine sinus surgery to the more recent use of balloons to open the sinus cavities, patient comfort has improved greatly after this particular operation. What used to be a several week recovery may now only be a few days.

Balloon sinuplasty in particular has been revolutionary in the surgical treatment of chronic sinusitis. Though sinus surgery normally is performed under general anesthesia, balloon sinuplasty now allows this operation to be performed awake WITHOUT sedation using local anesthesia only.

At its essence, sinus surgery "opens" up blocked sinus cavities to allow drainage and ventilation. Traditional sinus surgery "removes" tissue to accomplish this goal whereas balloon sinuplasty stretches open the sinus cavity without the need for tissue removal.

Given the lack of tissue removal with balloon sinuplasty, there is less pain and faster recovery after the procedure.

What are the steps?


After adequate anesthesia of the nose using both topical and injectable numbing medicine...


Step 1
Under endoscopic guidance, the balloon catheter is introduced into the nasal cavity and guided towards the target sinus cavity opening. Depending on the system used, a sinus guidewire or sinus illumination may be used to help with the guidance. 
sinuplasty
Step 2
Once the sinus balloon catheter is correctly positioned across the blocked sinus opening, the balloon is gradually inflated to stretch open the ostia.
sinuplasty
Step 3
After several seconds, the sinus balloon catheter is then deflated and removed leaving an enlarged sinus opening allowing for the return of sinus drainage. There is little to no disruption to mucosal lining.
sinuplasty

Of course, not all patients are candidates for balloon sinuplasty, let alone this procedure to be done awake with local anesthesia alone.


In particular, balloon sinuplasty can only address blockages involving the frontal, maxillary, and sphenoid sinus cavities. Ethmoid sinus cavities can NOT be corrected using this method.

Also, balloon sinuplasty does not allow for tissue biopsies (by definition, the advantage of balloon sinuplasty is the lack of need to remove any sinus or nasal tissues). As such, if there are any masses present including nasal polyps, traditional sinus surgery is the better way to go.



Fauquier blog
Fauquier ENT

Dr. Christopher Chang is a private practice otolaryngology, head & neck surgeon specializing in the treatment of problems related to the ear, nose, and throat. Located in Warrenton, VA about 45 minutes west of Washington DC, he also provides inhalant allergy testing/treatment, hearing tests, and dispenses hearing aids.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Great article!! Thank you. It's nice to know we may have a choice at a less invasive procedure. I had this surgery, although I was under anesthesia. My dr then implanted stents in my sinus that dripped medicine directly on the infection. (they stayed in for 28 days). This is how I finally got rid of my antibiotic resistant infection. You can find a video on u tube, search, Dr. Brian Weeks, futuristic medicine. It's a segment from THE DRS TV show, and it gives more detail for anyone interested.


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