Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Westmead Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Mechanical & Automotive Engineering, School of Engineering, RMIT University, Bundoora, Victoria 3083, Australia.
Respir Physiol Neurobiol. 2021 Nov;293:103719. doi: 10.1016/j.resp.2021.103719. Epub 2021 Jun 17.
Nasal adhesions are a known postoperative complication following surgical procedures for nasal airway obstruction (NAO); and are a common cause of surgical failure, with patients often reporting significant NAO, despite relatively minor adhesion size. Division of such nasal adhesions often provides much greater relief than anticipated, based on the minimal reduction in cross-sectional area associated with the adhesion. The available literature regarding nasal adhesions provides little evidence examining their quantitative and qualitative effects on nasal airflow using objective measures. This study examined the impact of nasal adhesions at various anatomical sites on nasal airflow and mucosal cooling using computational fluid dynamics (CFD). A high-resolution CT scan of the paranasal sinuses of a 25-year-old, healthy female patient was segmented to create a three-dimensional nasal airway model. Virtual nasal adhesions of 2.5 mm diameter were added to various locations within the nasal cavity, representing common sites seen following NAO surgery. A series of models with single adhesions were created. CFD analysis was performed on each model and compared with a baseline no-adhesion model, comparing airflow and heat and mass transfer. The nasal adhesions resulted in no significant change in bulk airflow patterns through the nasal cavity. However, significant changes were observed in local airflow and mucosal cooling around and immediately downstream to the nasal adhesions. These were most evident with anterior nasal adhesions at the internal valve and anterior inferior turbinate. Postoperative nasal adhesions create local airflow disruption, resulting in reduced local mucosal cooling on critical surfaces, explaining the exaggerated perception of nasal obstruction. In particular, anteriorly located adhesions created greater disruption to local airflow and mucosal cooling, explaining their associated greater subjective sensation of obstruction.
鼻腔粘连是鼻腔气道阻塞 (NAO) 手术后的已知并发症;是手术失败的常见原因,尽管粘连面积相对较小,但患者常报告存在明显的 NAO。根据与粘连相关的横截面积的微小减少,分离这种鼻腔粘连通常会提供比预期更大的缓解。关于鼻腔粘连的现有文献几乎没有提供使用客观测量方法检查其对鼻腔气流的定量和定性影响的证据。本研究使用计算流体动力学 (CFD) 检查了各种解剖部位的鼻腔粘连对鼻腔气流和粘膜冷却的影响。对一名 25 岁健康女性患者的副鼻窦进行高分辨率 CT 扫描,以分割出三维鼻腔气道模型。在鼻腔内的各个位置添加了直径为 2.5 毫米的虚拟鼻腔粘连,代表了 NAO 手术后常见的部位。创建了一系列具有单个粘连的模型。对每个模型进行 CFD 分析,并与无粘连的基线模型进行比较,比较气流和热量与质量转移。鼻腔粘连不会导致鼻腔内整体气流模式发生重大变化。然而,在鼻腔粘连周围和立即下游的局部气流和粘膜冷却观察到了显著变化。这些变化在内侧阀门和前下鼻甲的前鼻腔粘连中最为明显。术后鼻腔粘连会造成局部气流紊乱,导致关键表面的局部粘膜冷却减少,从而解释了对鼻腔阻塞的夸大感知。特别是位于前部的粘连会造成更大的局部气流和粘膜冷却紊乱,从而解释了它们与更大的主观阻塞感相关。