| Literature DB >> 35878351 |
Matthias C Jehle1, Nora M Biermann1, Eva Haltmayer1.
Abstract
This retrospective case series aims to highlight the advantages and disadvantages of different treatment options for sinus disease in horses, with a special focus on surgical approaches. The medical records of 25 horses with sinusitis which presented to the equine hospital, Vetmeduni Vienna, between August 2020 and January 2022 were analysed. In 11 cases, conservative treatment by the transnasal endoscopic lavage of the affected sinuses through the sinonasal channel or through a developed, pre-existing sinonasal fistula was performed. In the remaining 14 cases, openings into the sinus for subsequent lavage were surgically created either via classical trephination/bone flaps (8) or by transnasal endoscopically guided minimally invasive approaches (8). In some cases (2), a combination of classical extra-nasal and minimally invasive transnasal approaches was required. The minimally invasive techniques used were comprised of laser surgery (3), electrosurgery (3) and balloon sinoplasty (2). The sinusitis and underlying diseases were successfully treated in all of the horses until hospital discharge. Long-term follow-up could be obtained only from a small number of patients due to the temporal proximity (the study began two years ago) to their initial discharge from the hospital, but they showed the continuous resolution of clinical signs in all cases in which follow up data were available. The results of this case series indicate that if surgical intervention is required, minimally invasive techniques appear to be a promising and potentially cheaper alternative to classical extra-nasal approaches for the treatment of sinus disease in selected cases. In the future, the use of these techniques should be considered more commonly with the broader availability of improved endoscopes and instruments. Additionally, by using small-diameter endoscopes, the need for any surgical intervention might be significantly reduced in many cases.Entities:
Keywords: balloon sinoplasty; electrosurgery; equine; laser surgery; minimally invasive; sinusitis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35878351 PMCID: PMC9323710 DOI: 10.3390/vetsci9070334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Sci ISSN: 2306-7381
Figure 1Axial view with the endoscope placed in the middle nasal meatus on top of the ventral conchae (VC) with the distal end of the endoscope int the area of the sinonasal channel; endoscopic views are shown after conchotomy of the dorsal conchae (DC) (dashed line), the ventral conchae (spotted line) and after laser laser fenestration of the bulla of the maxillary septum (solid line); (Photo: Matthias Jehle, Vetmeduni Vienna).
Figure 2Foley catheter inserted into the medial nasal meatus and placed in the caudal sinonasal canal (white arrow) on top of the bulla of the maxillary septum (BMS) (Photo: Matthias Jehle, Vetmeduni Vienna).
Figure 3Surgically created opening to the ventral conchal sinus (white arrow) after electro surgical conchotomy: ventral conchae (VC), middle nasal passage (MNP), nasal septum (NS) (Photo: Matthias Jehle, Vetmeduni Vienna).
Figure 4Surgically created opening to the dorsal conchal sinus after electro conchotomy two days after surgery (white arrow): ventral conchae (VC), dorsal conchae (DC), nasal septum (NS) (Photo: Matthias Jehle, Vetmeduni Vienna).
Figure 5Conchotomy site of the same horse as in Figure 4, approximately 3 weeks after surgery with a view in the dorsal conchal sinus (white arrow), dorsal conchae (DC), and nasal septum (NS) (Photo: Matthias Jehle, Vetmeduni Vienna).
Figure 6Bulla of the maxillary septum (BMS) after laserbullotomy; surgically created passage to the rostral maxillary sinus (red arrow); natural passage to the caudal maxillary sinus through the caudal sinonasal canal (white arrow) and to the common nasal meatus (blue arrow) (Photo: Matthias Jehle, Vetmeduni Vienna).
Figure 7Bulla of the maxillary septum (BMS) after laserbullotomy; surgically created passage to the rostral maxillary sinus (red arrow); natural passage to the caudal maxillary sinus through the caudal sinonasal canal (white arrow) (Photo: Matthias Jehle, Vetmeduni Vienna).
Figure 8Bulla of the maxillary septum (BMS) after laserbullotomy; surgically created passage to the rostral maxillary sinus (red arrow); natural passage to the caudal maxillary sinus through the caudal sinonasal canal (white arrow) (Photo: Matthias Jehle, Vetmeduni Vienna).
Figure 9Bulla of the maxillary septum (BMS) after laserbullotomy; surgically created passage to the rostral maxillary sinus (red arrow); natural passage to the caudal maxillary sinus through the caudal sinonasal canal (white arrow) and to the common nasal meatus (blue arrow) (Photo: Matthias Jehle, Vetmeduni Vienna).
Signalement, diagnosis, access to sinus and additional procedures for cases described in this study.
| Patient | Age | Sex | Weight | Diagnosis | Exodontia | Access to Sinus | Additional Procedures | Complications/Additional Diagnoses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 29 | M | 525 | dental related sinusitis right CMS | 110 | NMA | MITSE 110; unspecified carcinoma CMS | |
| 2 | 23 | M | 434 | dental related sinusitis right (RMS, VCS, CMC, CFS) | 109 | NMA | removal necrotic bone fragments from ventral conchae | necrosis ventral conchae |
| 3 | 22 | M | 520 | dental related sinusitis right RMS, VCS | 108 | NMA | ||
| 4 | 11 | G | 540 | dental related sinusitis right RMS, VCS | 108 | NMA | ||
| 5 | 15 | G | 550 | dental related sinusitis left RMS, VCS, CMS, CFS | 208 | NMA ± necrotic conchae | removal necrotic bone fragments from ventral conchae | necrosis ventral conchae |
| 6 | 27 | G | 284 | sinusitis left RMS, VCS, CMS, SCV due to orosinuidal fistula 210/211 | NMA | removal necrotic bone fragments from ventral conchae | necrosis ventral conchae | |
| 7 | 16 | G | 542 | dental related sinusitis right RMS, VCS; | 109 | NMA | ||
| 8 | 27 | G | 414 | sinusitis left RMS, VCS, CMS, SCV due to orosinuidal fistula 210/211 | NMA | removal necrotic bone fragments from ventral conchae | necrosis ventral conchae | |
| sinussitis right RMS, CMS due to multiple sinus cysts RMS | NMA | |||||||
| 9 | 19 | M | 595 | sinusitis right RMS, VCS; granuloma roof ventral conchae/necrosis VC | NMA ± necrotic conchae | removal necrotic bone fragments from ventral conchae | necrosis ventral concahe | |
| 10 | 8 | M | 466 | sinusitis left CMS due to fracture lacrimal and maxillary bone | NMA | fracture nasolacrimal duct | ||
| 11 | 14 | M | 526 | dental related sinusitis right RMS, VCS, CMS, CFS | 109 | NMA | ||
| 12 | 13 | M | dental related sinusitis right RMS, CMS | 109 | Ballon Sinuplasty NMA | |||
| 13 | 10 | M | 458 | sinusitis due to infected fracture right lacrimal, maxillary and frontal bone | Ballon Sinuplasty NMA | retrograde insertion of the catheter into caudal sinonasal channel from open fracture site in maxillary bone | septic suturitis lacrimal/maxillary suture; | |
| sinusitis due to infected fracture left lacrimal, maxillary and frontal bone | Laser fenestration BMS | septic suturitis lacrimal/maxillary suture | ||||||
| 14 | 11 | G | 430 | sinusitis RMS post fracture maxillary bone | Laser fenestration BMS | |||
| 15 | 24 | M | 572 | dental related sinusitis left RMS, VCS | 209 | Laser fenestration BMS | ||
| 16 | 8 | G | 451 | primary mycotic sinusitis right CMS, CFS | conchotomy medial wall dorsal chonchae/CFS | |||
| SENMAP | ||||||||
| 17 | 33 | G | 365 | dental related sinusitis and sinus cysts left RMS, VCS, CMS | 209 | conchotomy medial wall ventral chonchae/VCS | ||
| Trephination CFS | cyst removal and access to nasal cavity | |||||||
| 18 | 4 | M | 530 | dental related sinusitis left RMS, CMS | 209 | conchotomy | no passage over infraorbital canal to RMS-long reserve crowns 208/209 | |
| 19 | 2 | G | 93 | sinusitis due to developmental related deformation left sinus system and impairment of sinus drainage | SENMAP | |||
| 20 | 13 | M | 600 | dental related sinusitis right RMS, VCS, CMS and sinus cysts RMS, VCS | 108 | SENMAP | ||
| 21 | 12 | G | sinusitis right CMS, CFS post fracture nasal and frontal bone-adhesions in the area of caudal sinonasal channel-impairment sinus drainage | SENMAP | recurrent sinus empyema | |||
| 22 | 19 | M | dental related sinusitis left RMS, VCS | 209 | SENMAP | orosinoidal fistula post exodontia 209 | ||
| 23 | 19 | M | 633 | ethmoid hematoma left and right VCS, RMS, CMS, CFS | bilateral SENMAP | tracheotomy; resection of REH remnants via diode laser and bipolar vessel sealing device | ||
| 24 | 20 | M | 700 | dental related sinusitis and sinus cysts left VCS, RMS, CMS, CFS and | 211 | frontal bone flap left | laser resection cyst left RVC | SSI bone flap |
| right RMS | 108 | maxillary trephination right | ||||||
| 25 | 26 | G | sinusitis left VCS, RMS, CMS, CFS; orosinoidal fistula 209/210 | 210 | SENMAP |
M: mare; G: gelding; VCS: ventral conchal sinus; RMS: rostral maxillary sinus; CMS: caudal maxillary sinus; CFS: conchofrontal sinus; NMA: nasomaxillary aperture; BMS: bulla of the maxillary septum; SENMAP: surgical enlargement of the nasomaxillary aperture.
Figure 10Foley catheter placed in a retrograde fashion in the caudal sinonasal canal (white arrow) after frontal trephination on top of the bulla of the maxillary septum (BMS); frontomaxillary aperture (FMA), caudal maxillary sinus (CMS) (Photo: Matthias Jehle, Vetmeduni Vienna).