Topical decongestants <3d (risk of rebound congestion)
Consider topical intranasal corticosteroids (eg. nasonex) in mild-moderate ARS (NNT 15)
If no improvement after 72h, consider antibiotics
Antibiotics
Consider treatment for suspected acute bacterial rhinosinusitis (as above) with severe symptoms or mild-moderate not responsive to INCS after 72h (NNT 17, NNH 8)
Amoxicillin 500mg PO q8h x 5-10 days
Second-line (or first-line if suspect resistance, immunosuppressed, frontal/sphenoidal sinusitis due to higher rates of complications)
Amoxicillin/Clavulanate 875/125mg PO BID x 7d
Moxifloxacin 400mg PO daily x 5d
Levofloxacin 500mg PO daily x 10d
If non-severe penicillin allergy, consider cefuroxime 250 BID x7d or cefixime 400 daily x10d
If anaphylaxis, consider clarithromycin, doxycycline or TMP-SMX
Follow-up
Lack of response within 72h suggests treatment failure
Referral to ENT if (and consider CT if long waiting time)
Complications
Persists >8w
Recurrent rhinosinusutis >3 episodes per year
Chronic rhinosinusitis
Definition
Inflammation in paranasal sinuses and nasal passages >12 weeks despite medical treatment
Treatment
Oral glucocorticoids PLUS empiric oral antibiotics x 4w
Prednisone 20mg PO BID x 5d, then 20mg daily x 5 days (total 10 days)
Amoxicillin-clavulanate 875mg PO BID or Clindamycin 450 mg PO TID
Topical glucocorticoid spray and intranasal saline irrigation or sprays