Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing
Podcast Image

BackTable ENT

Ep. 77 In-Office Procedures for Chronic Rhinitis with Dr. Stan McClurg

15 Nov 2022

Description

In this episode, Dr. Stan McClurg, a private practice rhinologist at Ascentist Healthcare in Kansas City, shares his approach to diagnosis and treatment of chronic rhinitis patients using the in-office RhinAer procedure. --- CHECK OUT OUR SPONSOR Aerin Medical https://aerinmedical.com/ --- SHOW NOTES First, Dr. McClurg talks us through his patient base. When he initially started as a rhinologist, he would get referrals for patients with persistent rhinitis after a procedure. Before in-office procedures for chronic rhinitis were developed, he recommended ipratropium bromide spray to patients and referred them for allergy testing. However, his recent patient referrals have been for isolated chronic rhinitis (defined by consistent rhinorrhea for more than 4 weeks) with no other ENT problems. With these patients, he performs allergy skin testing to make sure the diagnosis is not really allergic rhinitis that can be treated with desensitization therapy. He also uses a rigid nasal endoscope to check the patient’s nose for colored purulence and polyps, two clues that can point to a diagnosis other than chronic rhinitis. When he scopes his patient, he does not use a decongestant spray and uses a small endoscope to avoid patient discomfort. If he believes that a patient has chronic rhinitis, he will perform a ipratropium bromide challenge; he asks patients to use the spray for 1 month. If their symptoms are mitigated by the spray, then he is more optimistic that an in-office procedure will mitigate the chronic rhinitis. If the patient fails the trial, the secretions are probably coming from a source other than the nose, and the diagnosis is unlikely to be chronic rhinitis. Next, Dr. McClurg speaks about different in-office treatments for chronic rhinitis. He first explains his experience with ClariFix, a procedure that uses cryoablation to freeze the posterior nasal nerve. He has found that 40% of his patients experience the known side effect of post-treatment headache. Additionally, some of them may have crusting in the sphenopalatine region that causes post-nasal drip. Since then, he has switched to using the RhinAer system, which delivers radioablation through a stylus to treat the posterior nasal nerve more aggressively. It also has the capability of treating the inferior turbinate. Dr. McClurg notes that patients with normal nasal anatomy and a good ipratropium bromide response are the best candidates for this procedure. 80% of his patients see a favorable result after surgery. He then describes his RhinAer in-office procedure. He does these procedures in exam rooms in order to help with flow of his day and make his patients more comfortable. He only uses lidocaine to anesthetize the patient, as he has found that epinephrine causes tachycardia and anxiety. The procedure, including anesthesia time, takes him about 10 minutes. However, he adds that he has performed this procedure in the OR as an adjunct procedure after a septoplasty or a rhinoplasty. Finally, he describes his recommendations for postoperative care. He encourages his patients to do daily saline rinses. He notes it takes about 6-8 weeks for the RhinAer procedure to show a good response. During this time, he recommends that patients use ipratropium bromide concurrently in order to obtain an optimal response.

Audio
Featured in this Episode

No persons identified in this episode.

Transcription

This episode hasn't been transcribed yet

Help us prioritize this episode for transcription by upvoting it.

0 upvotes
🗳️ Sign in to Upvote

Popular episodes get transcribed faster

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Please log in to write the first comment.