Loading…

Microbiology of rhinosinusitis in immunosupressed patients from the University Hospital

Immunosuppressed patients are often susceptible to upper airway infections, especially those of the paranasal sinuses. These can sometimes jeopardize treatment success and even lead to a fatal outcome. To study the paranasal microbiology of immunosuppressed patients with clinical evidence of rhinosi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Brazilian journal of otorhinolaryngology 2011-07, Vol.77 (4), p.522-525
Main Authors: Ortiz, Erica, Yen Ng, Ronny Tah, Alliegro, Fernando Canola, Teixeira, Cristiane, Muranaka, Eder Barbosa, Sakano, Eulalia
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Immunosuppressed patients are often susceptible to upper airway infections, especially those of the paranasal sinuses. These can sometimes jeopardize treatment success and even lead to a fatal outcome. To study the paranasal microbiology of immunosuppressed patients with clinical evidence of rhinosinusitis, and compare it with that from immunocompetent patients. Retrospective study, in which 42 immunosuppressed and 16 immunocompetent patients were selected. All had clinically evident acute or recurrent rhinosinusitis and were submitted to ethmoidal or sphenoid sinusectomy or maxillary sinus puncture to gather material for microbiological cultures. There were 92% positive cultures, and 21% were negative. Of the positive cultures, 38% were bacterial, with P. aeruginosa being the most frequent agent; 64% were fungal, which occurred in the most immunocompromised patients. In the immunocompetent group, there were 62.5% positive cultures and 37.5% negative ones. All the positive ones were bacterial, with no fungi. Transplant recipients were prone to develop bacterial rhinosinusitis by Gram positive and Gram negative agents, the most common of the latter being Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Fungal infections occurred in the severely immunosuppressed, and it was absent in immunocompetent patients.
ISSN:1808-8694
1808-8686
1808-8686
DOI:10.1590/S1808-86942011000400018