Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Antibiotics and Sinusitis

Today, the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology linked to a study recently published by physicians at the Washington University School of Medicine. I'm sure the study will cause a lot of hubbub among doctors and patients because it essentially recommends just symptomatic treatment for most sinusitis, siding with a recent CDC panel's recommendations.

I, for one, am glad to see that serious work is being done to discuss what works and what doesn't for the average patient with sinusitis. Overusing antibiotics puts patients with chronic problems at higher risk for complications from antibiotic resistant bugs. Further, I think that most people go running to the primary care doctor for antibiotics at the first signs of discomfort. I think physicians should be much quicker to recommend symptom relief and much slower to dispense antibiotics. It would be better for people in the long run. People should also realize that it takes time for their immune response to fully kick in and remove the pathogens. In this study, patients treated with amoxicillin and patients treated with placebo had the same results 10 days out.

The study's authors were careful to exclude those with chronic sinusitis, ear infections, chest infections, and other complications to get a better picture of what the average person with a normal immune system and normal sinus presentations would experience. I am hopeful that the next stages of the investigators' work will yield some positive outcomes and treatment procedures for those with sinus infections... hopefully, they'll be antibiotic free.

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