Nasal Polyposis

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Nasal Polyposis - Polyp Primer

  • Definition: Benign, pale, edematous, pedunculated mucosal outgrowths from nasal/sinus lining.
  • Types:
    • Ethmoidal Polyps:
      • Bilateral, multiple, grape-like.
      • Adults; often eosinophilic.
      • Associated with asthma, Aspirin Exacerbated Respiratory Disease (AERD), Allergic Fungal Rhinosinusitis (AFRS).
    • Antrochoanal Polyp (Killian's Polyp):
      • Unilateral, solitary.
      • Originates in maxillary antrum, extends to choana/nasopharynx.
      • Commoner in children/young adults.
  • Pathogenesis: Chronic inflammation (Th2-driven, eosinophilic in many), epithelial barrier dysfunction, biofilm role.
  • ⭐ > In children presenting with bilateral nasal polyps, Cystic Fibrosis (CF) must be excluded.
  • 📌 Samter's Triad (AERD): Asthma + Aspirin Sensitivity + Nasal Polyps.

Histopathology of Nasal Polyp: Edematous Stroma

Nasal Polyposis - Symptom Spotlight

  • Cardinal Symptoms:
    • Progressive bilateral nasal obstruction (most common)
    • Anosmia / Hyposmia (often a primary complaint, significant impact)
    • Rhinorrhea: mucoid/watery; purulent if secondary infection
    • Post-nasal drip, chronic cough
    • Facial pressure/headache (if extensive or with sinusitis)
  • Signs on Examination:
    • Smooth, pale/greyish, glistening, "peeled grape" appearance
    • Typically bilateral, arising from middle meatus/ethmoids
    • Insensitive to probing (differentiates from turbinates)
  • Key Systemic Associations:
    • Samter's Triad (AERD: Asthma, Aspirin sensitivity, Nasal Polyps)
    • Cystic Fibrosis (suspect in any child with polyps)
    • Allergic Fungal Rhinosinusitis (AFRS)
    • Churg-Strauss Syndrome (EGPA)

⭐ Samter's Triad (Aspirin Exacerbated Respiratory Disease - AERD) is a crucial association: Nasal Polyps + Bronchial Asthma + Aspirin/NSAID intolerance.

Endoscopic view of nasal polyps with anatomical labels

Nasal Polyposis - Detective Work

  • Investigations:
    • DNE: Visualize origin, extent, character of polyps.
    • CT PNS: Roadmap for surgery; assess sinus opacification, bony erosion.
    • Biopsy: Mandatory for unilateral/suspicious lesions.
    • Consider: Allergy tests (skin prick/RAST), CF testing (children, recurrent/refractory cases).

⭐ Unilateral nasal polyps or those with atypical features (e.g., bleeding, pain) require urgent biopsy to exclude malignancy or conditions like inverted papilloma.

Nasal Polyposis - Taming the Polyps

Pale, edematous sinonasal mucosal outgrowths due to chronic inflammation (often eosinophilic, Th2-mediated).

  • Key Associations: Asthma, Aspirin Exacerbated Respiratory Disease (AERD/Samter's Triad), Cystic Fibrosis (esp. children), Allergic Fungal Rhinosinusitis (AFRS).
  • Symptoms: Persistent nasal obstruction, significantly ↓smell (anosmia/hyposmia), chronic rhinorrhea, facial pressure.
  • Diagnosis: Clinical exam, nasal endoscopy (reveals characteristic pale, grape-like masses), CT scan (evaluates sinus opacification and bony anatomy). Nasal Endoscopy: Nasal Polyp, Middle Turbinate, Nasal Septum
  • Medical Therapy:
    • INS: First-line (e.g., fluticasone, mometasone).
    • OCS: Short courses for severe symptoms/pre-op.
    • Biologics (anti-IgE, anti-IL5/5R, anti-IL4Rα): For severe, recalcitrant Chronic Rhinosinusitis with Nasal Polyps (CRSwNP).
  • Surgical: Functional Endoscopic Sinus Surgery (FESS) for failed medical therapy or extensive disease.
  • Recurrence: Common; requires long-term management and patient education.

⭐ Samter's Triad (AERD) consists of Nasal Polyps, Bronchial Asthma, and Aspirin Intolerance. 📌 ASA triad.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Nasal polyps: Typically bilateral, pale, grape-like masses, arising from ethmoidal sinuses (middle meatus).
  • Strong association with allergy, asthma, aspirin sensitivity (Samter's Triad); and cystic fibrosis in children.
  • Antrochoanal polyp: Usually unilateral, from maxillary sinus to choana, common in children/adolescents.
  • Key symptoms include: Nasal obstruction, anosmia/hyposmia, and watery rhinorrhea.
  • Management: Intranasal corticosteroids (first-line); FESS for refractory cases.
  • High recurrence rate.

Practice Questions: Nasal Polyposis

Test your understanding with these related questions

Assertion: Nasal polyps are commonly associated with aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD). Reason: Aspirin directly causes nasal polyp formation in all patients with AERD.

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Flashcards: Nasal Polyposis

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_____lateral nasal obstruction, nasal discharge, and epistaxis are the main presenting symptoms for inverted papilloma

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____lateral nasal obstruction, nasal discharge, and epistaxis are the main presenting symptoms for inverted papilloma

Uni

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