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Fitango Education
          Health Topics

                              Sinusitis




http://www.fitango.com/categories.php?id=242
Overview
"Sinusitis" simply means your
sinuses are inflamed? Red and swollen because of
an infection or another
problem. There are several types of sinusitis.
Health experts usually identify
them as follows:



                                                   1
Overview
-- Acute, which lasts up to 4 weeks
-- Subacute, which lasts 4 to 12 weeks
-- Chronic, which lasts more than 12 weeks and
can continue for months or even years
-- Recurrent, with several attacks within a




                                                 2
Overview
year
In 2009, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
reported that nearly 31 million adults were
diagnosed with sinusitis. Women
were almost twice as likely as men to receive the
diagnosis, and there were


                                                    3
Overview
more cases in the southern United States than
elsewhere in the country.




                                                4
Symptoms
One of the most common symptoms of any type
of sinusitis is pain, and the location depends on
which sinus is affected.
If you have pain in your forehead, the
problem lies in your frontal sinuses.




                                                    5
Symptoms
Pain in your upper jaw and teeth, with
tender cheeks, may mean your maxillary sinuses
are involved.
Experiencing pain between your eyes,
sometimes with swelling of the eyelids and tissues
around your eyes, and



                                                     6
Symptoms
tenderness when you touch the sides of your nose
may mean sinusitis has
developed in your ethmoid sinuses.
Pain in your neck, with earaches, and deep
achiness at the top of your head could be a sign
that your sphenoid sinuses are



                                                   7
Symptoms
involved (though these sinuses are affected less
often).
Most people with sinusitis have pain or
tenderness in several places, and their symptoms
usually do not clearly
indicate which sinuses are inflamed. Pain is not as
common in chronic sinusitis


                                                      8
Symptoms
as it is in acute sinusitis.
In addition to the pain, people who have
sinusitis (acute or chronic) often have thick nasal
secretions that can be
white, yellowish, greenish, or blood-tinged.
Sometimes these secretions drain



                                                      9
Symptoms
in the back of the throat and are difficult to clear.
This is referred to as
“post-nasal drip.” Also, cases of acute and chronic
sinusitis are usually
accompanied by a stuffy nose, as well as by a
general feeling of fullness over
the entire face.


                                                        10
Symptoms
Less common symptoms of sinusitis (acute or
chronic) can include the following:
-- Tiredness
-- Decreased sense of smell
-- Cough that may be worse at night




                                              11
Symptoms
-- Sore throat
-- Bad breath
-- Fever
On very rare occasions, acute sinusitis can
result in brain infection and other serious
complications.


                                              12
Symptoms
Because your nose can get stuffy or
congested when you have a condition like the
common cold, you may confuse
simple nasal congestion with sinusitis. A cold
usually lasts about 7 to 14 days
and goes away without treatment. Acute sinusitis
often lasts longer and


                                                   13
Symptoms
typically causes more symptoms than a cold.




                                              14
Causes
The paranasal sinuses, like the inside of
your nose, are lined with a thin layer of tissue
called the mucous membrane,
which produces mucus. This mucus flows out
through openings of the paranasal




                                                   15
Causes
sinuses and into the nose. When these openings
become blocked, your sinuses are
affected.
Anything that causes swelling in the nose
can block the openings between your paranasal
sinuses and your nose, including



                                                 16
Causes
a cold, an allergic reaction such as hay fever, or a
reaction to some chemical
to which you've been exposed. The blockage
causes air and mucus to become
trapped within the sinuses. This may cause pain
and thickened mucus.
The pain of a sinus attack arises because


                                                       17
Causes
the trapped air and mucus put pressure on the
mucous membrane of the sinuses
and the bony wall behind it. Also, when a swollen
membrane at the opening of a
paranasal sinus prevents air from entering into the
sinuses, it can create a
vacuum that causes pain.


                                                      18
Causes
Mucus thickens because it loses its water
content as it stays trapped inside the sinuses for a
long time. In addition,
inflammation leads to extra materials being
secreted into the mucus, causing
thickening.



                                                       19
Diagnosis
Your healthcare professional usually can
diagnose acute sinusitis by noting your symptoms
and examining your nose and
face. If your symptoms do not clearly indicate that
you have sinusitis or if




                                                      20
Diagnosis
they persist for a long time and do not get better
with treatment, your
healthcare professional may order a CT
(computerized tomography) scan (a form
of X-ray that shows some soft-tissue and other
structures that cannot be seen




                                                     21
Diagnosis
in conventional X-rays) to confirm that you have
sinusitis.
Other laboratory tests your healthcare
professional may use to check for possible causes
of chronic rhinosinusitis
include the following:



                                                    22
Diagnosis
-- Blood tests to rule out conditions, such as
an immune deficiency disorder, that are associated
with sinusitis
-- A sweat test or a blood test to rule out
cystic fibrosis




                                                     23
Diagnosis
-- Tests on the material inside your sinuses
to detect bacterial or fungal infection




                                               24
Treatment
After diagnosing sinusitis and identifying
a possible cause, your healthcare professional can
suggest various treatments.




                                                     25
Treatment
               **Acute sinusitis**
If you have acute sinusitis, your
healthcare professional may recommend the
following:
-- Antibiotics to control a bacterial
infection, if present




                                            26
Treatment
               **Acute sinusitis**
-- Pain relievers to reduce any pain
-- Decongestants (medicines that shrink the
swollen membranes in the nose and make it easier
to breathe)
Even if you have acute sinusitis, your




                                                   27
Treatment
               **Acute sinusitis**
healthcare professional may choose not to use an
antibiotic because many cases
of acute sinusitis will end on their own. However, if
you do not feel better
after a few days, you should contact your
healthcare professional again.
Follow your healthcare professional's


                                                        28
Treatment
              **Acute sinusitis**
instruction on how to use over-the-counter or
prescription decongestant nose
drops and sprays. You should use these medicines
for only a few days, as longer
term use can lead to even more congestion and
swelling of your nasal passages.




                                                   29
Treatment
               **Acute sinusitis**
If you suffer from nasal allergies, such as
hay fever, along with sinusitis, your healthcare
professional may recommend
medicine to control your allergies. This may
include a nasal steroid spray that




                                                   30
Treatment
              **Acute sinusitis**
reduces the swelling around the sinus passages
and allows the sinuses to drain.
If you have asthma and then get sinusitis,
your asthma may worsen. You should contact your
healthcare professional, who
may change your asthma treatment.



                                                  31
Treatment
            **Chronic rhinosinusitis**
Healthcare professionals often find it
difficult to treat chronic rhinosinusitis successfully.
They have two options
to offer patients: medicine and surgery.




                                                          32
Treatment
                  **Medicine**
Nasal steroid sprays are helpful for many
people, but most people still do not get full relief
of symptoms with these
medicines.
A long course of antibiotics is




                                                       33
Treatment
                 **Medicine**
occasionally recommended by physicians, but
results from clinical research do
not support this kind of antibiotic use.
Saline (saltwater) washes or saline nasal
sprays can be helpful in chronic rhinosinusitis
because they remove thick



                                                  34
Treatment
                 **Medicine**
secretions and allow the sinuses to drain.
Oral steroids, such as prednisone, may be
prescribed for severe chronic rhinosinusitis.
However, oral steroids are
powerful medicines with significant side effects,
and these medicines typically



                                                    35
Treatment
                 **Medicine**
are prescribed when other medicines have failed.
Research is needed to develop new, more
effective treatments.




                                                   36
Treatment
                   **Surgery**
When medicine fails, surgery may be the
only alternative for treating chronic rhinosinusitis.
The goal of surgery is to
improve sinus drainage and reduce blockage of the
nasal passages. Nasal surgery




                                                        37
Treatment
                  **Surgery**
usually is performed to accomplish the following:
-- Enlarge the natural openings of the sinuses
-- Remove nasal polyps
-- Correct significant structural problems




                                                    38
Treatment
                  **Surgery**
inside the nose and the sinuses if they contribute
to sinus obstruction
Although most people have fewer symptoms
and a better quality of life after surgery, problems
can reoccur, sometimes
even after a short period of time.



                                                       39
Treatment
                 **Surgery**
In children, problems can sometimes be
eliminated by removing the adenoids. These gland-
like tissues, located high in
the throat behind and above the roof of the
mouth, can obstruct the nasal
passages.



                                                    40
Prevention
There are no methods that have been
scientifically proven to prevent acute or chronic
sinusitis. Your healthcare
professional may recommend the following
measures that can help:




                                                    41
Prevention
-- Keep your nose as moist as possible with
frequent use of saline sprays or washes.
-- Avoid very dry indoor environments and use
a humidifier, if necessary. Be aware, however, that
a humid environment also




                                                      42
Prevention
may increase the amount of mold, dust mite, or
cockroach allergens in your
home; this is important only if you are allergic to
any of those organisms.
-- Avoid exposure to irritants such as
cigarette and cigar smoke or strong odors from
chemicals.


                                                      43
Prevention
-- Avoid exposure to substances to which you
are allergic.
-- If you haven’t been tested for allergies
and you are getting frequent sinus infections, ask
your healthcare professional




                                                     44
Prevention
to give you an allergy evaluation or refer you to an
allergy specialist.
-- Avoid long periods of swimming in pools
treated with chlorine, which can irritate the lining
of the nose and sinuses.
-- Avoid water diving, which forces water into



                                                       45
Prevention
the sinuses from the nasal passages.
Air travel may pose a problem if you suffer
from acute or chronic sinusitis. When air pressure
in a plane is reduced,
pressure can build up in your head, blocking your
sinuses or the eustachian



                                                     46
Prevention
tubes (the airways between the middle ear and the
back of the throat that
equalize air pressure on either side of the
eardrum). As a result, you might
feel discomfort in your sinuses or middle ear
during the plane’s ascent or




                                                    47
Prevention
descent. Some health experts recommend using
decongestant nose drops or sprays
before a flight to avoid this problem.




                                               48
Sinusitis

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Sinusitis

  • 1. Fitango Education Health Topics Sinusitis http://www.fitango.com/categories.php?id=242
  • 2. Overview "Sinusitis" simply means your sinuses are inflamed? Red and swollen because of an infection or another problem. There are several types of sinusitis. Health experts usually identify them as follows: 1
  • 3. Overview -- Acute, which lasts up to 4 weeks -- Subacute, which lasts 4 to 12 weeks -- Chronic, which lasts more than 12 weeks and can continue for months or even years -- Recurrent, with several attacks within a 2
  • 4. Overview year In 2009, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that nearly 31 million adults were diagnosed with sinusitis. Women were almost twice as likely as men to receive the diagnosis, and there were 3
  • 5. Overview more cases in the southern United States than elsewhere in the country. 4
  • 6. Symptoms One of the most common symptoms of any type of sinusitis is pain, and the location depends on which sinus is affected. If you have pain in your forehead, the problem lies in your frontal sinuses. 5
  • 7. Symptoms Pain in your upper jaw and teeth, with tender cheeks, may mean your maxillary sinuses are involved. Experiencing pain between your eyes, sometimes with swelling of the eyelids and tissues around your eyes, and 6
  • 8. Symptoms tenderness when you touch the sides of your nose may mean sinusitis has developed in your ethmoid sinuses. Pain in your neck, with earaches, and deep achiness at the top of your head could be a sign that your sphenoid sinuses are 7
  • 9. Symptoms involved (though these sinuses are affected less often). Most people with sinusitis have pain or tenderness in several places, and their symptoms usually do not clearly indicate which sinuses are inflamed. Pain is not as common in chronic sinusitis 8
  • 10. Symptoms as it is in acute sinusitis. In addition to the pain, people who have sinusitis (acute or chronic) often have thick nasal secretions that can be white, yellowish, greenish, or blood-tinged. Sometimes these secretions drain 9
  • 11. Symptoms in the back of the throat and are difficult to clear. This is referred to as “post-nasal drip.” Also, cases of acute and chronic sinusitis are usually accompanied by a stuffy nose, as well as by a general feeling of fullness over the entire face. 10
  • 12. Symptoms Less common symptoms of sinusitis (acute or chronic) can include the following: -- Tiredness -- Decreased sense of smell -- Cough that may be worse at night 11
  • 13. Symptoms -- Sore throat -- Bad breath -- Fever On very rare occasions, acute sinusitis can result in brain infection and other serious complications. 12
  • 14. Symptoms Because your nose can get stuffy or congested when you have a condition like the common cold, you may confuse simple nasal congestion with sinusitis. A cold usually lasts about 7 to 14 days and goes away without treatment. Acute sinusitis often lasts longer and 13
  • 15. Symptoms typically causes more symptoms than a cold. 14
  • 16. Causes The paranasal sinuses, like the inside of your nose, are lined with a thin layer of tissue called the mucous membrane, which produces mucus. This mucus flows out through openings of the paranasal 15
  • 17. Causes sinuses and into the nose. When these openings become blocked, your sinuses are affected. Anything that causes swelling in the nose can block the openings between your paranasal sinuses and your nose, including 16
  • 18. Causes a cold, an allergic reaction such as hay fever, or a reaction to some chemical to which you've been exposed. The blockage causes air and mucus to become trapped within the sinuses. This may cause pain and thickened mucus. The pain of a sinus attack arises because 17
  • 19. Causes the trapped air and mucus put pressure on the mucous membrane of the sinuses and the bony wall behind it. Also, when a swollen membrane at the opening of a paranasal sinus prevents air from entering into the sinuses, it can create a vacuum that causes pain. 18
  • 20. Causes Mucus thickens because it loses its water content as it stays trapped inside the sinuses for a long time. In addition, inflammation leads to extra materials being secreted into the mucus, causing thickening. 19
  • 21. Diagnosis Your healthcare professional usually can diagnose acute sinusitis by noting your symptoms and examining your nose and face. If your symptoms do not clearly indicate that you have sinusitis or if 20
  • 22. Diagnosis they persist for a long time and do not get better with treatment, your healthcare professional may order a CT (computerized tomography) scan (a form of X-ray that shows some soft-tissue and other structures that cannot be seen 21
  • 23. Diagnosis in conventional X-rays) to confirm that you have sinusitis. Other laboratory tests your healthcare professional may use to check for possible causes of chronic rhinosinusitis include the following: 22
  • 24. Diagnosis -- Blood tests to rule out conditions, such as an immune deficiency disorder, that are associated with sinusitis -- A sweat test or a blood test to rule out cystic fibrosis 23
  • 25. Diagnosis -- Tests on the material inside your sinuses to detect bacterial or fungal infection 24
  • 26. Treatment After diagnosing sinusitis and identifying a possible cause, your healthcare professional can suggest various treatments. 25
  • 27. Treatment **Acute sinusitis** If you have acute sinusitis, your healthcare professional may recommend the following: -- Antibiotics to control a bacterial infection, if present 26
  • 28. Treatment **Acute sinusitis** -- Pain relievers to reduce any pain -- Decongestants (medicines that shrink the swollen membranes in the nose and make it easier to breathe) Even if you have acute sinusitis, your 27
  • 29. Treatment **Acute sinusitis** healthcare professional may choose not to use an antibiotic because many cases of acute sinusitis will end on their own. However, if you do not feel better after a few days, you should contact your healthcare professional again. Follow your healthcare professional's 28
  • 30. Treatment **Acute sinusitis** instruction on how to use over-the-counter or prescription decongestant nose drops and sprays. You should use these medicines for only a few days, as longer term use can lead to even more congestion and swelling of your nasal passages. 29
  • 31. Treatment **Acute sinusitis** If you suffer from nasal allergies, such as hay fever, along with sinusitis, your healthcare professional may recommend medicine to control your allergies. This may include a nasal steroid spray that 30
  • 32. Treatment **Acute sinusitis** reduces the swelling around the sinus passages and allows the sinuses to drain. If you have asthma and then get sinusitis, your asthma may worsen. You should contact your healthcare professional, who may change your asthma treatment. 31
  • 33. Treatment **Chronic rhinosinusitis** Healthcare professionals often find it difficult to treat chronic rhinosinusitis successfully. They have two options to offer patients: medicine and surgery. 32
  • 34. Treatment **Medicine** Nasal steroid sprays are helpful for many people, but most people still do not get full relief of symptoms with these medicines. A long course of antibiotics is 33
  • 35. Treatment **Medicine** occasionally recommended by physicians, but results from clinical research do not support this kind of antibiotic use. Saline (saltwater) washes or saline nasal sprays can be helpful in chronic rhinosinusitis because they remove thick 34
  • 36. Treatment **Medicine** secretions and allow the sinuses to drain. Oral steroids, such as prednisone, may be prescribed for severe chronic rhinosinusitis. However, oral steroids are powerful medicines with significant side effects, and these medicines typically 35
  • 37. Treatment **Medicine** are prescribed when other medicines have failed. Research is needed to develop new, more effective treatments. 36
  • 38. Treatment **Surgery** When medicine fails, surgery may be the only alternative for treating chronic rhinosinusitis. The goal of surgery is to improve sinus drainage and reduce blockage of the nasal passages. Nasal surgery 37
  • 39. Treatment **Surgery** usually is performed to accomplish the following: -- Enlarge the natural openings of the sinuses -- Remove nasal polyps -- Correct significant structural problems 38
  • 40. Treatment **Surgery** inside the nose and the sinuses if they contribute to sinus obstruction Although most people have fewer symptoms and a better quality of life after surgery, problems can reoccur, sometimes even after a short period of time. 39
  • 41. Treatment **Surgery** In children, problems can sometimes be eliminated by removing the adenoids. These gland- like tissues, located high in the throat behind and above the roof of the mouth, can obstruct the nasal passages. 40
  • 42. Prevention There are no methods that have been scientifically proven to prevent acute or chronic sinusitis. Your healthcare professional may recommend the following measures that can help: 41
  • 43. Prevention -- Keep your nose as moist as possible with frequent use of saline sprays or washes. -- Avoid very dry indoor environments and use a humidifier, if necessary. Be aware, however, that a humid environment also 42
  • 44. Prevention may increase the amount of mold, dust mite, or cockroach allergens in your home; this is important only if you are allergic to any of those organisms. -- Avoid exposure to irritants such as cigarette and cigar smoke or strong odors from chemicals. 43
  • 45. Prevention -- Avoid exposure to substances to which you are allergic. -- If you haven’t been tested for allergies and you are getting frequent sinus infections, ask your healthcare professional 44
  • 46. Prevention to give you an allergy evaluation or refer you to an allergy specialist. -- Avoid long periods of swimming in pools treated with chlorine, which can irritate the lining of the nose and sinuses. -- Avoid water diving, which forces water into 45
  • 47. Prevention the sinuses from the nasal passages. Air travel may pose a problem if you suffer from acute or chronic sinusitis. When air pressure in a plane is reduced, pressure can build up in your head, blocking your sinuses or the eustachian 46
  • 48. Prevention tubes (the airways between the middle ear and the back of the throat that equalize air pressure on either side of the eardrum). As a result, you might feel discomfort in your sinuses or middle ear during the plane’s ascent or 47
  • 49. Prevention descent. Some health experts recommend using decongestant nose drops or sprays before a flight to avoid this problem. 48