Surgical causes of failure in endoscopic sinus surgery

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Abstract

Objectives: Evaluate causes of surgical failure at time of revision endoscopic sinus surgery. Study Design: Prospective review of 682 cases that had endoscopic sinus surgery performed between 1991 and 1995. Methods: In all cases, variables of age, sex, asthma, allergy, computed tomography stage, associated procedures, complications, and operative findings were collected. Those cases that had a failure after a previous endoscopic sinus procedure and not an intranasal procedure or an external procedure were evaluated. Results: Fifty-two patients (7.6%) were identified. The age range was 24 to 70 years. The most common cause of failure was residual air cells and adhesions in the ethmoid area (30.7%), followed by maxillary sinus ostium stenosis in 27%, frontal sinus ostium stenosis in 25%, and a separate maxillary sinus ostium stenosis in 15% of the cases. Conclusion: Review of surgical causes of failure in endoscopic sinus surgery patients revealed that residual air cells and stenotic maxillary or frontal sinus ostium were the most common causes of failures.

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Ramadan, H. H. (1999). Surgical causes of failure in endoscopic sinus surgery. Laryngoscope, 109(1), 27–29. https://doi.org/10.1097/00005537-199901000-00006

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