Clinical and 22-item Sino-Nasal Outcome Test symptom patterns in primary headache disorder patients presenting to otolaryngologists with "sinus" headaches, pain or pressure.
Հիմնաբառեր
Վերացական
BACKGROUND
The objective of this work was to study patient and 22-item Sino-Nasal Outcome Test (SNOT-22) characteristics in primary headache disorders (PHDs).
METHODS
Retrospective chart review of "sinus" headache/pressure/pain patients was conducted. Patients that had rhinosinusitis excluded (negative endoscopy/computed tomography [CT]), and neurologist-confirmed PHD were studied. Patterns in symptom and SNOT-22 items were analyzed by network visualization and cluster analysis.
RESULTS
Forty-six patients met study criteria. Forty-three (93.5%) reported "need to blow nose" and 40 (86.9%) reported postnasal drainage. Sneezing was reported by 37 (80.4%) patients, "blockage/congestion of nose" by 33 (71.8%), and "runny nose by 32 (69.6%) patients. The median SNOT-22 score was 54 (interquartile range [IQR], 40 to 63). Past history included neurological diagnoses (60%), rhinologic disease (39%; chronic rhinosinusitis [CRS], rhinitis, recurrent acute sinusitis), asthma (28%), and allergen-sensitivity (26%). Previous sinonasal surgery had been performed in 41%. Network layout and cluster analysis identified 2 patient clusters and 2 symptom clusters. Two-thirds (31) of patients formed a tight cluster (cluster 1) linking to a symptom cluster of psychosocial items wrapped tightly with "facial pain/pressure." The remaining one-third of patients (cluster 2) linked to rhinologic symptoms loosely grouped away from "facial pressure/pain." In contrast to patients in cluster 2, patients in cluster 1 were predominantly female (p < 0.04), had significantly higher (p < 0.0001) median SNOT-22 scores (60 vs 34; IQR, 53 to 67 vs 17 to 42), were more likely to have migraine history (p = 0.058), and reported being "sad" (p < 0.0001) or "embarrassed" (p < 0.006).
CONCLUSIONS
Prominent rhinologic symptoms can be present in PHD patients in the absence of rhinosinusitis. In particular, high symptom-burden/SNOT-22 scores and high psychosocial symptoms should raise suspicion of PHD when endoscopy and/or CT results do not correlate with symptoms.