Grundlagen und Praxis der Anwendung von Nasentamponaden in der endonasalen Chirurgie

  • Rainer K Weber
  • Fabian Sommer
  • Werner Heppt
  • Werner Hosemann
  • Thomas Kühnel
  • Achim Georg Beule
  • Martin Laudien
  • Thomas K Hoffmann
  • Anna Sophie Hoffmann
  • Ingo Baumann
  • Thomas Deitmer
  • Jan Löhler
  • Tanja Hildenbrand

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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: This paper presents an overview on nasal packing materials which are available in Germany. The current literature is analyzed whether there are robust criteria regarding use nasal packing after sinonasal surgery, whether there are fundamental and proven advantages or disadvantages of products, and what this means in clinical practice.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Selective literature analysis using the PubMed database (key words "nasal packing", "nasal tamponade", "nasal surgery", "sinonasal surgery", or "sinus surgery"), corresponding text books and resulting secondary literature.

RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Because of systematic methodological shortcomings, the literature does not help in the decision-making about which nasal packing should be used after which kind of sinonasal surgery. In fact, individual approaches for the many different clinical scenarios are recommended. In principle, nasal packing aims in hemostasis, should promote wound healing, and should not result in secondary morbidity. Nasal packing materials should be smooth (non-absorbable materials), inert (absorbable materials), and should not exert excessive pressure. Using non-absorbable packing entails the risk of potentially lethal aspiration and ingestion. For safety reasons inpatient control is recommended as long as this packing is in situ. With other, uncritical packing materials and in patients with special conditions, outpatient control could be justified.

Bibliographical data

Translated title of the contributionFundamentals and practice of the application of nasal packing in sinonasal surgery
Original languageGerman
ISSN0017-6192
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.2024

Comment Deanary

© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Medizin Verlag GmbH, ein Teil von Springer Nature.

PubMed 37845539