Definition & Anatomy - Septal Skew Show
- Deviated Nasal Septum (DNS): Displacement of the nasal septum from the nasal cavity's centreline.
- Anatomy:
- Cartilaginous: Quadrangular cartilage.
- Bony: Perpendicular plate of ethmoid, vomer, maxillary crest, palatine crest.
- Blood Supply:
- Kiesselbach's plexus (anterior epistaxis site).
- Sphenopalatine artery, Anterior & Posterior Ethmoidal arteries.
- Nerve Supply:
- Anterior Ethmoidal nerve (branch of V1).
- Nasopalatine nerve (branch of V2).

⭐ The nasal septum is roughly 1/3 cartilaginous (anterior) and 2/3 bony (posterior).
Etiology & Types - Why It Bends
- Etiology (Causes):
- Trauma: Leading cause.
- Birth injury: Molding during passage, forceps.
- Later life: Accidental, sports, altercations.
- Developmental Errors:
- Unequal growth rates between septum and surrounding structures (skull base, palate).
- Associated with high arched palate.
- Trauma: Leading cause.
- Common Types/Patterns:
- Anterior (caudal) dislocation: Septum slips off maxillary crest.
- C-shaped deformity: Simple curve.
- S-shaped deformity: More complex, often bilateral obstruction.
- Septal spur: Shelf-like projection (bone/cartilage).
- Thickening: Due to overriding of dislocated fragments.
⭐ Most common cause of DNS is trauma.

Clinical Features & Complications - The Blocked Truth
- Symptoms:
- Nasal obstruction: Unilateral/bilateral; paradoxical (wider side blocked due to turbinate hypertrophy).
- Headache: Contact point, Sluder's neuralgia.
- Epistaxis: Stretched mucosa over spur.
- Anosmia/hyposmia.
- Snoring, mouth breathing, dry throat.
- Signs:
- External nasal deformity (occasional).
- Deviated septum on anterior rhinoscopy.
- Compensatory inferior turbinate hypertrophy.
- Complications (Untreated DNS):
- Recurrent sinusitis.
- Mucocele.
- Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA).
- Middle ear infections (via Eustachian tube dysfunction).
⭐ Paradoxical nasal obstruction: The wider nasal cavity (contralateral to septal deviation) can feel more blocked due to reactive inferior turbinate hypertrophy caused by altered airflow dynamics and chronic irritation. This is a common exam question!
Diagnosis - Spotting the Swerve
- History Taking: Focus on nasal obstruction, headache, epistaxis, anosmia.
- Clinical Examination:
- Anterior Rhinoscopy: After decongestion (if needed), assess septal deviation.

- Nasal Endoscopy: Visualizes posterior deviations, spurs, contact points.
⭐ Nasal endoscopy is the gold standard for assessing posterior deviations and spurs.
- Cottle's Test: Assesses nasal valve area contribution to obstruction.
- Probing: Determines consistency of spur (bony/cartilaginous).
- Anterior Rhinoscopy: After decongestion (if needed), assess septal deviation.
- Investigations (Indications-based):
- CT Scan (Nose & PNS): Suspected sinusitis, planned FESS, osseocartilaginous issues, pre-revision.
- Acoustic Rhinometry/Rhinomanometry: Objective airflow assessment (not routine).
Management - Fixing the Bend
- Medical (Symptomatic Relief):
- Decongestants (short-term), antihistamines, topical nasal steroids.
- Surgical Management:
- Indications: Symptomatic obstruction, recurrent sinusitis/epistaxis due to DNS, OSA, surgical access (FESS, hypophysectomy).
- Procedures:
- Septoplasty: Preferred; reconstructs, preserves cartilage. Age >17 yrs.
- SMR (Submucous Resection): Removes deflected cartilage/bone. Age >17 yrs.
- Incisions: Killian's, Hemitransfixion/Freer's.
- Complications: Septal hematoma, abscess, perforation, saddle nose, columellar retraction, persistent deviation, anosmia, CSF leak (rare), toxic shock syndrome.
⭐ Persistent deviation and septal hematoma are common complications of septal surgery.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Nasal obstruction is the hallmark symptom, often worse on one side.
- Cottle's test is positive, indicating internal nasal valve compromise.
- Compensatory inferior turbinate hypertrophy frequently occurs on the contralateral side.
- Septoplasty is the preferred surgical treatment for symptomatic DNS.
- Anterior (caudal) dislocations can cause severe external deformity and obstruction.
- Complications include septal hematoma, abscess, and saddle nose deformity or perforation.
- DNS can predispose to recurrent sinusitis and epistaxis.
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