The Impact of Synbiotics on the Bacterial Flora During the Course of Chronic Sinusitis
Karolina Goroszkiewicz, Grażyna Lisowska, Grażyna Stryjewska-Makuch, Olga Karłowska-Bijak, Maciej Misiołek

TL;DR
This study shows that synbiotics may reduce harmful bacteria in chronic sinusitis patients after surgery, potentially lowering antibiotic use.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that synbiotic supplementation can modulate the sinus microbiota and reduce postoperative antibiotic needs in chronic rhinosinusitis patients.
Findings
Synbiotic group showed reduced pathogenic bacterial colonies post-surgery compared to controls.
Patients in the synbiotic group required less postoperative antibiotic therapy.
Both groups saw increased Gram-positive and physiological flora after surgery.
Abstract
Background and objectives: Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a multifactorial inflammatory condition often associated with microbiome imbalance (dysbiosis). Recent studies highlight the potential role of synbiotics—combinations of probiotics and prebiotics—in modulating the microbiota and supporting immune responses. The authors of this study aimed to evaluate the impact of oral synbiotic supplementation on the sinus microbiota in patients undergoing endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) for CRS. Materials and Methods: A total of 425 adult patients with CRS were enrolled in a multicenter retrospective study. According to EPOS 2020 guidelines, participants qualified for ESS. The intervention group (n = 194) received a synbiotic preparation for 6–8 weeks before and after surgery; the control group (n = 231) received no supplementation. Intraoperative and follow-up bacteriological samples were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSinusitis and nasal conditions · Nosocomial Infections in ICU · Respiratory and Cough-Related Research
