Similar effect of therapeutic ultrasound and antibiotics for acute bacterial rhinosinusitis: a randomised trial

Eli Høsøien, Anne B Lund, Ottar Vasseljen, Eli Høsøien, Anne B Lund, Ottar Vasseljen

Abstract

Question: Is there any difference between the effect of therapeutic ultrasound and antibiotics (amoxicillin) on pain and congestion for acute bacterial rhinosinusitis in the short-term? Is there any difference in patient satisfaction, preferred future intervention, side-effects and relapses in the long-term?

Design: A randomised trial with concealed allocation and intention-to-treat analysis.

Participants: 48 patients (6 dropouts) with clinically diagnosed acute bacterial rhinosinusitis in primary care.

Intervention: The experimental group received 4 consecutive days of ultrasound and the control group received a 10-day course of antibiotics.

Outcome measures: Pain and congestion around the nose and in the forehead and teeth were measured on a 0-10 numeric rating scale at baseline, Day 4, and Day 21. Satisfaction, preferred future intervention, side-effects, and relapses were measured one year later.

Results: By Day 4, pain around the nose had decreased by 1.5 points out of 10 (95% CI 0.6 to 2.5) more in the experimental group than the control group. There were no other differences in decrease in pain and congestion between the groups at Day 4 or 21. At one year follow-up, the experimental group were more likely to prefer ultrasound than the control group were to prefer antibiotics to manage a future episode (RR 2.75, 95% CI 1.19 to 7.91). There were no other differences between the groups in terms of satisfaction with intervention, number of side-effects, or number of relapses.

Conclusion: The results of this study suggest that therapeutic ultrasound is a viable alternative to antibiotics in the management of acute bacterial rhinosinusitis.

Trial registration: NCT00934830.

Source: PubMed

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