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Updated: Jun 21 2017

Rhinitis

Snap Shot
  • rhinitisA 15-year-old boy presents to with clear fluid discharge from his nose for 2 days duration. This has also been associated with sneezing. On nasal exam, the mucosa and turbinates appear edematous and slightly bluish (allergic rhinitis).
Overview
  • Inflammation of nasal mucosa with one or more of the following for at least one hour on a majority of days:
    • sneezing
    • itching
    • rhinorrhea
    • nasal congestion
Classification
  • Allergic
    • IgE-mediated
    • seasonal
    • perennial
      • reaction to perennial aeroallergens including dust mites, mold, animal dander, pollen
    • episodic 
      • after a specific aeroallergen exposure
  • Nonallergic
    • not IgE-mediated
    • eosinophilic rhinitis (NARES – nonallergic rhinitis with eosinophilia syndrome)
      • symptoms are similar to perennial but no identifiable allergen hypersensitivity
      • respond to intranasal corticosteroids
    • vasomotor rhinitis
      • thought to be caused by imbalance of autonomic nervous supply 
      • blood vessels become engorged causing obstruction
      • can occur with strong smells, irritants, cold air
  • Infectious 
    • acute 
    • 98% caused by viruses
    • symptoms include nasal congestion, mucopurulent nasal discharge, pain and pressure, headache, olfactory disturbance, post nasal drainage, cough
  • Others
    • occupational
    • hormonal 
      • such as in pregnancy, which can start after second month of pregnancy and resolves within two weeks after delivery
      • menstrual cycle
    • drug-induced 
      • e.g., ACEi, phentolamine, ASA, NSAIDs
      • rhinitis medicamentosa
        • rebound nasal congestion after overuse of alpha-adrenergic decongestants or cocaine
    • irritants
    • emotional 
      • such as with sexual arousal (honeymoon rhinitis)
    • food
    • atrophic 
      • characterized by significant crusting and foul odor
    • geriatric
    • idiopathic
Epidemiology
  • 30 - 60 million in the United States
  • 10 - 30% of adults
  • Up to 40% children
  • Risk factors
    • family history of atopy
    • serum IgE >100 IU/ml before age of 6
    • high socioeconomic class
    • positive allergy skin prick test
Pathogenesis
  • Mucosal inflammation caused by infiltrating inflammatory cells, vasoactive and pro-inflammatory mediators, sensory nerve activation, plasma leakage and congestion.
Diagnosis and Evaluation
  • Clinical diagnosis based upon history and physical
  • Conditions that mimic rhinitis that need to be on differential
    • nasal polyps
    • anatomic anomalies
    • CSF leaks
    • ciliary dysfunction
  • Skin testing
  • IgE immunoassays
  • Nasal endoscopy
  • Nasal smears 
Management
  • Limit exposure to antigens
  • Oral antihistamines for allergic rhinitis 
  • Intranasal antihistamines
    • efficacious and equal to oral antihistamines for treatment of seasonal allergic rhinitis
  • Oral and topical decongestants 
    • e.g., pseudoephedrine
    • should be limited to short-term use because of the risk rhinitis medicamentosa
  • Intranasal corticosteroids
  • Oral corticosteroids 
    • for short course treatment of very severe or intractable nasal symptoms
  • Intranasal anticholinergic 
    • effective for rhinorrhea of nonallergic rhinitis
  • Nasal saline
  • Allergan immunotherapy
  • Acute infectious rhinitis
    • often caused by virus
    • 7 - 10 days of observation
    • risk of development for bacterial sinusitis in which case antibiotics can be beneficial
    • see Common cold topic 
Question
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