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Frontal Sinus Surgery Jacques Peltier, MD Faculty Advisor: Matthew Ryan, MD Department of Otolaryngology University of Texas Medical Branch Grand Rounds Presentation October 11, 2006
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Frontal Sinus Surgery

Dec 09, 2016

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Page 1: Frontal Sinus Surgery

Frontal Sinus Surgery

Jacques Peltier, MD Faculty Advisor: Matthew Ryan, MD

Department of Otolaryngology University of Texas Medical Branch

Grand Rounds Presentation October 11, 2006

Page 2: Frontal Sinus Surgery

Anatomy • Uncinate process

• Agger Nasi

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Anatomy

• Hiatus Semilunaris

• Ethmoid infundibulum

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• Frontal Sinus Drainage Pathway

• Frontal Sinus Ostium

Anatomy

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Anatomy

• Cribriform Plate

• Lamina papyracea

• Fovea ethmoidalis

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Anatomic Variations

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Anatomy

• Anterior Terminal Recess

• Posterior Terminal Recess

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Finding The Frontal Recess

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Finding The Frontal Recess

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Frontal Cells

• Type I - Single cell above the agger nasi

• Type II - Two or more cells above the agger cell

• Type III - Single cell extending from the agger cell into the frontal sinus

• Type IV - Isolated cell within the frontal sinus

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Frontal Cells

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Frontal Cells

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Frontal Cells

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Anatomic Variations

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Surgical Indications

• Chronic sinusitis unresolved with maximal medical therapy;

• Polyps and allergic fungal sinusitis

• Intracranial complications of sinusitis

• Mucoceles or mucopyoceles

• Benign neoplasms such as osteomas, inverting papillomas, or fibrous dysplasia.

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Draf Procedures

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Draf I

• Anterior ethmoid cells

• Uncinate process

• Obstructing frontal cells

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Draf II

• Floor of the frontal sinus

• Lamina papyracea to Septum

• Anterior face of Frontal

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Draf III

• Modified Lothrop

• Interfrontal septum

• Nasal septum

• Frontal sinus floor

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Frontal Sinus Trephination

• Finding the frontal recess

• Mucoceles

• Isolated Type IV frontal cells

• With endoscopic techniques to assist with Draf II and III

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Frontal Sinus Trephination

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Frontal Sinus Trephination

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Frontal Sinus Trephination

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Frontal Sinus Trephination

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Combined Approaches

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Combined Approaches

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Combined Approaches

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Modified Lothrop

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Modified Lothrop

Take down the septum first

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Osteoplastic Flap Vs. Draf III

• Narrow Nasal Airway

• Small Frontal Sinus

• Deep Nasion

• Floor of sinus < 1.5 cm

• Heavy thick nasofrontal beak

• Proliferative osteitis, complicated chronic infection

• Favor Draf III for mucoceles

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Osteoplastic Flap Vs. Draf III

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Osteoplastic Flap

• May be modified to

fit the patient

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Osteoplastic Flap

• Small bony flap

• Care to preserve

supratrochlear

bundle

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Osteoplastic Flap

• 6 foot Caldwell

• Image guidance

• Wire probe

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Osteoplastic Flaps

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Osteoplastic Flaps

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Osteoplastic Flap

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Osteoplastic Flap

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Osteoplastic Flap

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Pearls to Operating in the frontal recess

• Taken from a lecture by David Kennedy MD at the academy meeting this year

• Pearl – look for lectures at academy that will assist your grand rounds

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Pearl #1 Carefully Examine the Anatomy in more than one CT plane

• Size of the frontal recess

• Size of the frontal sinus

• Bony thickening or neo-osteogenesis

• Identify the frontal sinus drainage pathway

• Note the position of the anterior ethmoidal artery

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Pearl # 2 Identify the Anterior Ethmoidal Artery

• Superior extension of anterior wall of bulla

• Nipple on the medial orbital wall

• 1-4 mm’s below skull base

• Typically posterior to supraorbital ethmoid cells

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Pearl #3: Plan the least invasive approach possible

• Ethmoidectomy with Middle Meatal Antrostomy without frontal recess surgery

• Frontal recess surgery

• Endoscopic frontal sinusotomy

• Frontal sinus trephination

• Unilateral extend frontal sinus surgery (Draf II)

• Endoscopic Modified Lothrop (Draf III)

• Osteoplastic flap with or without obliteration

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Pearl #4 Positively Identify the Skull Base Posteriorly

• Skeletonize from posterior to anterior

• Open cells immediately posterior to the middle turbinate

• Identify the sinus with a seeker

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Pearl #5 Positively identify the frontal sinus with a probe

• Need a relatively dry field

• 45 degree telescopes are helpful

• Identify medial orbital wall and stay close to it dissecting superiorly

• Opening to frontal sinus typically medial

• Identify opening with a probe

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Pearl # 6 Preserve the Mucosa

• Consider leaving polyps if sinus is open

• Remove osteitic intersinus septae carefully

• Do not traumatize unless sinus can be opened widely

• Standard frontal sinusotomy – Draf Type II

– Works well if you can: • Preserve mucosa

• Remove bony partitions

• Create an ostium >4-5 mm

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Pearl #7 Keep the Sinus Open Postoperatively

• Remove fibrin and blood from frontal recess and frontal sinus

• Remove residual bone

• Antibiotics, topical steroids?

• Oral Steroids?

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Pearl #8 Avoid obliteration in tumors and allergic fungal sinusitis

• Combine osteoplastic approach with

Draf 3 if possible in these situations

• Avoids imaging difficulties after surgery

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Pearl #9 Always avoid complications in FESS. Most

operations are for benign disease

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Conclusion

• Very little evidence based medicine

• Do the least invasive procedures first

• Be aware of various surgical options

• Image guidance a valuable tool

• First do no harm