Changes in nasal epithelium in patients with severe chronic sinusitis: A clinicopathologic and electron microscopic study Journal Article


Authors: Al-Rawi, M. M.; Edelstein, D. R.; Erlandson, R. A.
Article Title: Changes in nasal epithelium in patients with severe chronic sinusitis: A clinicopathologic and electron microscopic study
Abstract: Objective: Defective ciliary ultrastructure and impaired mucociliary clearance play an important role in the development of respiratory disease and sinusitis. Changes in the ciliary ultrastructure of the sinonasal epithelium have been documented in patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia. However, secondary ciliary dyskinesias and epithelial cytopathologic changes have been underappreciated as a consequence of respiratory dysfunction and chronic sinusitis. Study Design: Thirty-two patients with severe chronic sinusitis were evaluated for ciliary and epithelial abnormalities. Materials and Methods: Fourteen patients (44%) were children who underwent full allergy, sweat, and immunologic workups. Eighteen patients (56%) were adults who had severe refractory sinusitis and had failed previous sinus surgery. All patients underwent nasal epithelium biopsies of the middle turbinate and evaluation by light and transmission electron microscopy. Results: Ciliated cells were found in 23 patients (72%) with 9 patients (28%) having no cilia. Foci of normal ciliated epithelium were found in only 19% of the patients, often in epithelial invaginations. Variable numbers (usually a minor population) of cilia in 20 cases (87%) exhibited ultrastructural defects including compound cilia and microtubule and dynein arm defects. All of the patients showed variable loss of differentiated epithelial cells ranging from denuded epithelium to basal cell hyperplasia often associated with squamous metaplasia, secondary to chronic sinonasal disease. The lamina propria was often edematous with dilated capillaries, plasma cells, lymphocytes, and hyperplastic seromucous glands. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that ciliary dyskinesias are primarily the result rather than the cause of chronic sinusitis. Patients with chronic sinusitis of uncertain origin exhibit a prominent loss of differentiated epithelial cells, as well as ciliary defects, most of which are likely to be secondary to the chronic disease process. These changes slow down mucociliary clearance and lead to a vicious cycle leading to chronicity.
Keywords: adolescent; adult; child; clinical article; controlled study; human tissue; aged; child, preschool; middle aged; histopathology; cell differentiation; biopsy; chronic disease; basal cell; epithelium cell; epithelium; cell hyperplasia; dynein adenosine triphosphatase; ciliary dyskinesia; ciliated epithelium; transmission electron microscopy; cell ultrastructure; sinusitis; lamina propria; mucociliary clearance; squamous cell metaplasia; humans; human; male; female; priority journal; article; nose mucosa; nasal mucosa; chronic sinusitis; mucociliary transport; ciliary motility disorders
Journal Title: Laryngoscope
Volume: 108
Issue: 12
ISSN: 0023-852X
Publisher: Wiley Blackwell  
Date Published: 1998-12-01
Start Page: 1816
End Page: 1823
Language: English
PUBMED: 9851497
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI: 10.1097/00005537-199812000-00010
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Presented at the Meeting of the Eastern Section of the American Laryngological, Rhinological and Otological Society, Inc. which took place 1998 Jan 31 in New York, New York, NY -- Export Date: 12 December 2016 -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Robert A Erlandson
    125 Erlandson