Navigating the orbital complications of endoscopic sinus surgery: a systematic review of 204,286 patients
Feras Alkholaiwi, Laila Zamil Alzamil, Reuof Mohammed Alotaibi, Layan Ahmed Alrehaili, Nouf Saleh AlBlaihed, Joud Nasser Bindekhayel, Bushra Saud Bin Dalah, Shawq Fayez Aljabri, Reyouf Abdullah Aba Alhaweel, Anas Bassam Barnawi

TL;DR
This systematic review examines the rare but serious orbital complications of endoscopic sinus surgery in over 200,000 patients, finding that image-guided techniques may reduce risks.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive synthesis of orbital complication rates and factors in endoscopic sinus surgery across a large patient cohort.
Findings
Orbital complications occurred in 0.175% of patients, with rates ranging from 0% to 27.6% depending on surgical technique.
Image-guided endoscopic sinus surgery was associated with lower complication rates compared to conventional methods.
Orbital injury, hematoma, and subcutaneous emphysema were the most commonly reported complications.
Abstract
The association between endoscopic sinus surgery and orbital complications is a complex and multifaceted one. While the precise relationship between the two is not fully elucidated, there is increasing evidence indicating a significant correlation between endoscopic sinus surgery and orbital complications. To comprehensively examine the orbital complications that can arise from endoscopic sinus surgery, including their incidence, etiology, clinical manifestations, management strategies, and outcomes. An extensive search was conducted across multiple relevant databases to identify studies meeting the established inclusion criteria. The databases examined included PubMed, MEDLINE, and Embase, and the following search terms were used: (“Endoscopic sinus surgery” OR “FESS” OR “ESS”) AND (“Orbital complications” OR “Ocular injury” OR “Periorbital hemorrhage”). The search was limited to…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsSinusitis and nasal conditions · Facial Trauma and Fracture Management · Nasolacrimal Duct Obstruction Treatments
