# Clinical efficacy study of a spherical nasal vestibular stent

**Authors:** Junxiao Jia, Jikuan Qiu, Rui Li, Baoshi Fan, Yi Lu, Xiangzhi Bai, Yu Song, Junxiu Liu

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2025.1748584 · 2026-01-13

## TL;DR

A new spherical nasal stent was developed and tested to effectively treat nasal obstruction with minimal side effects.

## Contribution

A novel spherical nasal vestibular stent was designed using 3D modeling and validated clinically for nasal obstruction.

## Key findings

- The stent significantly reduced nasal resistance and improved nasal volume and valve area.
- Patients showed lower obstruction scores and tolerated the stent well with mild side effects.
- 3D reconstruction correlated anatomical changes with symptom improvement.

## Abstract

To design and validate a spherical nasal vestibular stent based on vestibular structural changes for treating nasal obstruction.

This study enrolled 99 patients with nasal obstruction and confirmed positive findings on anterior rhinoscopy. Pre- and post-dilation sinonasal computed tomography (CT) scans were obtained until symptoms nearly resolved. Three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction was utilized to evaluate anatomical changes, and Spearman correlation analysis was performed to assess the relationship between these changes and visual analog scale (VAS) scores for nasal obstruction. Based on 3D reconstructed models and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) parameter evaluations, a nitinol mesh stent customized to the anatomical characteristics of the nasal vestibule was designed. A single-arm clinical trial in 31 patients was subsequently evaluated the stent using NOSE scores, acoustic rhinometry, and rhinomanometry before and after placement. Adverse events were systematically recorded.

3D reconstruction showed that changes in nasal vestibule volume before and after dilation correlated with patients’ VAS scores for nasal obstruction. In the clinical trial, the spherical nasal vestibular stent—designed using nasal vestibule volume data—significantly reduced nasal resistance (p < 0.05), increased nasal volume and valve area (p < 0.001), and lowered NOSE scores (p < 0.001). Most patients tolerated the stent well; side effects like dryness and pain were mild.

Based on 3D models from dilated nasal vestibules, this study designed a spherical stent that effectively relieves nasal obstruction with minimal risk, positioning it as a promising non-surgical intervention for clinical application.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pain (MESH:D010146), nasal obstruction (MESH:D015508), dilation (MESH:D002311), dryness (MESH:D014987)
- **Chemicals:** nitinol (MESH:C013616)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12835200/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12835200