Title: Principles of Functional Endoscopic Sinus Surgery
1Principles of Functional Endoscopic Sinus Surgery
- Shahin Bastaninejad, MD
- Assistant Prof. of ORL-HNS
- TUMS
- AmirAlam Hospital
2Outline
- Definition
- Anatomy
- Patient evaluation
- FESS Concepts of Surgery
3Definition
4Functional Endoscopic Sinus Surgery
- Replaced old practice of obliterating sinuses and
removing mucosa. Concept of irreversibly diseased
mucosa refuted. - Functional aspect refers to
- Preserving normal structures
- Removing only obstruction
- Preserving mucosa
- Attempt to restore function
5Anatomy
6Ethmoid anatomy
- Ethmoid anatomy is complex Labyrinth
- Lamellae
- 1st - Uncinate
- 2nd - Ethmoid bulla
- 3rd - Basal lamella of middle turbinate
- 4th - Superior turbinate
7Drainage
- Frontal, anterior ethmoid maxillary OMC
- Posterior Ethmoids Superior meatus
- Sphenoid sinus Sphenoid-ethmoidal recess
8Middle Turbinate
- Three components
- First Anterior, oriented in a sagittal plane
and attached to skull base - Second Middle, oriented in a Vertical plane and
attached to lamina papyracea (basal lamella and
separates ant from post ethmoids) - Third Posterior, oriented in a horizontal plane
and attaches to perpendicular plate of palate
(forms roof of middle meatus, anterior to
sphenopalatine foramen)
9Middle Turbinate
10Ostiomeatal Complex (OMC)
- Common drainage for frontal, maxillary and
anterior ethmoid sinuses.
11OMC
12OMC
- Infundibulum funnel shaped area whereby the
maxillary, ant ethmoid and frontal sinuses
drains - Uncinate process Sickle shaped bony ethmoidal
structure - Hiatus Semilunaris Half-moon shape opening of
infundibulum
13Uncinate Process
- Attaches to the following structures
- Inf far post. To ethmoid process of inf. Turb
14Uncinate Process
- Ant far sup. To lamina papyracea, skull base
or mid turb
15- Laterally Lamina papyracea and fontanelle area
16Uncinate Process
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18Bulla Ethmoidalis
- The greatest anterior ethmoid air cell, attached
to lamina papyrcea and usually open into lateral
sinus
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20Sinus Lateralis Suprabullar recess and
retrobullar recess
21Middle turbinate Horizontal and vertical basal
lamella
SBR
Sinus Lateralis
RBR
22Sphenoid Ostium
- Medial to posterior sup. turbinate
- Located between nasal septum and inferior aspect
of sup. turbinate - Located at the same level as the roof of the
maxillary sinus - Located 4 microdebrider/suction tip breaths above
the choanae - Located 7cm from nasal crest at 30
23Sphenoid Ostium
24Sphenoid Sinus
- Relationships of important structures
- Optic nerve superior-lateral
- Carotid artery/cav sinus mid-lateral
- Vidian nerve and maxillary nerve
inferior-lateral
25Square ant clinoid process, Circles optic
canals, triangle vidian nerve Asterisk
pneumatization of pterygoid process
26Sphenoid Classification
27Presellar
Sellar
Conchal
Post sellar
28Onodi Cells or Sphenoethmoid cells
29Optic Canal in Onodi Cells
30anatomic keyhole in SBS
31LOCR
32Cribriform plate
Keros classification
1-3mm
3-7mm
7-16mm
33Keros Classification
- Type I
- 1-3mm
- Type II
- 3-7mm
- Type III
- 7-16mm
34Fovea and Ethmoidal arteries
35Lens 70 degree End of surgery
36Frontal Cells
Kuhn Cells
37Frontal Recess
- Anatomic Boundries
- Ant unicate process agger nasi
- Post bulla ethmoidalis and suprabullar lamella
- Lateral lamina papyracea
- Medially hiatus semilunaris or middle turb
- Inf Ethmoid infundibulum
- Sup Fovea ethmoidalis, supraorbital air cell,
anterior ethmoid artery and frontal ostium
38Draf IIA
Draf I
39Draf III
Draf
40Frontal Sinus Mucociliary Pattern
? Save Mucosal Layer in Lateral part while
performing Draf III opertation
41Patient evaluation
42Pre-op CT Evaluation
- CLOSE Technique
- C Cribriform
- L Lamina Papyracea
- O Orbits, onodi cell, Optic Nerve
- S Sphenoid, Skull Base
- E Ethmoid Arteries
43C - Cribriform
- Assess the Keros type
- Look for assymetry
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45L Lamina Papyracea
- Check for dehiscence or pathologic fractures
46O Orbit, Optic Nerve, Onodi Cells
- Check for dehiscence
- Assess for onodi cells (superior-lateral to
sphenoid) - Orbital slope
47S Sphenoid, Skull base
- Assess for Carotid dehiscence and aeration
patterns - Conchal, Pre-sellar, Sellar (thickness of
clivus)
48Skull base
- Assess slope of skull base
- Assess if roof of sphenoid is level with skull
base
49E Ethmoid Artery
50FESS
51Role of surgery
- Should be considered as adjunctive to medical
therapy - CRS is an inflammatory and multifactorial disease
- Institute medical therapy first prior to surgery
unless impending complications - Continued medical therapy is required following
surgery to avoid recurrence
52- Defined surgical substeps are defined according
to specific pathophysiologic obstruction that
exist based on microanatomy
53Antrostomy
- Some speculate nitric oxide produced in maxillary
sinus has bacteriostatic properties, therefore
better to keep antrostomy small - Uncinate must be completely removed, source of
recurrence. - Mucociliary clearance remains to natural os
- Antrostomy must include the natural osium and
accessory osium if present
54Recirculation
55Frontal Sinusotomy
- Question on to perform or not
- Do as little as possible but as much as necessary
- Some advocate ethmoid dissection and monitor
- Graduated approach to frontal sinuses
-
- Should evaluate with sagittal reconstruction
- Evaluate A-P and Mediolateral dimensions, asses
neo-osteogenesis and pneumatization
56 Ethmoidectomy Sphenoidotomy
- Continue operation Anteroposteriorly toward the
Sphenoid sinus, then open it - Now it is time to go on with Posteroanterior
approach with a 30 degree lens and cutting
forceps
57References
- Dr Quinn online Text book
- Diseases of the Sinuses Diagnosis and
Management. Kennedy. Chapters 1, 2, 3, 15, and
16 - Head and Neck Otolaryngology. Bailey. Chapters
21, 25, 26. - Endoscopic Sinus Surgery Dissection Manual With
Cdrom. Casiano - Endoscopic Anatomy of the lateral nasal wall,
ostiomeatal complex and anterior skull base, a
step-by-step guide. Reda Kamel - Endoscopic diagnosis and surgery of the paranasal
sinuses and the anterior skull base. Heinz
Stammberger - Rhinology and Sinus Disease, a problem-oriented
approach. Steven D. Schaefer - Nasal and Sinus Surgery. Steven Marks. Sections
1, 2, and 3. - Surgical anatomy and physiology for the skull
base surgeon. Ameet Singh, et al. Operative
Techniques in Otolaryngology (2011) 22, 184-193 - FRONTAL SINUS SURGERY 2004 UPDATE OF CLINICAL
ANATOMY AND SURGICAL TECHNIQUES. MICHAEL
FRIEDMAN, et al. OPERATIVE TECHNIQUES IN
OTOLARYNGOLOGYHEAD AND NECK SURGERY, VOL 15, NO
1 (MAR), 2004 PP 23-31
58Thank You!