The impact of nasal adhesions on airflow and mucosal cooling -- a computational fluid dynamics analysis
Praween Senanayakea, Hana Salati, Eugene Wong, Kimberley Bradshaw,, Yidan Shang, Narinder Singh, Kiao Inthavong

TL;DR
This study uses computational fluid dynamics to analyze how nasal adhesions affect airflow and mucosal cooling, revealing localized effects despite minimal impact on overall airflow patterns.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed quantitative analysis of nasal adhesion effects on airflow and cooling using CFD, highlighting localized impacts at specific sites.
Findings
Nasal adhesions cause significant local airflow changes.
Minimal impact on overall nasal airflow patterns.
Localized effects are most prominent at anterior nasal sites.
Abstract
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…
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