The Impact of Bioabsorbable Nasal Implants, Nasal Radiofrequency Remodeling, and Anesthesia Type on Patient Selection for Nasal Valve Surgery
F. Jeffrey Lorenz, Cheng Ma, Scott G. Walen

TL;DR
This study compares patient characteristics and anesthesia use for different nasal valve surgery techniques in the U.S.
Contribution
It identifies demographic and comorbidity trends associated with newer nasal valve procedures compared to traditional methods.
Findings
NVI and NRR patients were older and had more medical comorbidities than NVR patients.
NRR had the highest comorbidity burden and was most often performed with local anesthesia.
Most comorbidities were not significantly more common in patients receiving local versus general anesthesia.
Abstract
To compare patient demographics, comorbidities, anesthesia type, and trends in nasal valve implantation (NVI) and nasal radiofrequency remodeling (NRR) techniques versus traditional nasal valve repair (NVR). Retrospective case‐control. In total, 58 health care organizations (HCOs) across the United States. The TriNetX Research Network was queried from 2021 through 2023, forming three cohorts of patients who underwent (1) NVR, (2) NVI, or (3) NRR. Demographics, comorbidities, and anesthesia type were compared across groups at the time of intervention. A total of 10,568 NVR, 764 NVI, and 485 NRR cases were identified. Patients undergoing NVI or NRR compared to NVR were more likely to be older and exhibit a higher prevalence of medical comorbidities, including sleep apnea, hyperlipidemia, type 2 diabetes, gastroesophageal reflux disease, liver disease, hypertension, ischemic heart…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNasal Surgery and Airway Studies · Obstructive Sleep Apnea Research · Sinusitis and nasal conditions
