Not all cases of sinusitis are caused by bacteria. Although very uncommon, there
are cases of sinusitis whose culprit has been identified as a type of fungus
that thrives in the moist and dark environment of the paranasal sinuses. Mostly,
these cases are common among patients whose immune systems have been compromised
or weakened by other underlying serious medical conditions. This does not
suggest though that only patients with compromised immune system are at risk of
falling victim to fungal sinusitis. Recent research suggests that fungal
sinusitis is also becoming a common complaint among perfectly healthy people.
Fungal sinusitis can manifest in two ways ?the invasive type and the
non-invasive type.
Invasive Fungal Sinusitis
The more serious form of
infection is commonly found among patients of diabetes and other individuals
with weak immune system. Usually, the fungus that has infected them moves very
rapidly, invading the infected tissues in a matter of weeks often causing
progressive destruction to the site of infection. Such type exposes the patient
to the risk of dying as a result of widespread fungal infection to the bony
cavities housing the eyeballs. More severe cases of this type of sinusitis have
infection that spreads to the brain. Once this happens, the damages to the brain
tissues are irreversible. This could possibly end in death, unless appropriate
surgical intervention is given to the patient.
There are two sub-types
of invasive fungal sinusitis ?first is the fulminant sinusitis which occurs most
commonly among immuncompromised patients. Such patients have deficient
immunologic mechanisms which may be the result of an immunodeficiency disorder
or the effect of immunosuppressive agents, a type of medication that can render
weakening of the immune system activities.
The other type of invasive
fungal sinusitis is chronic indolent sinusitis, which unlike the fulminant type,
is idiopathic, meaning that there is no identifiable immune deficiency disorder
that may have caused it. This is less common in the United States than in
countries like India and Sudan. In this form, the infection may progress for
several months and even years without significant damage to infected tissues.
Common symptoms include chronic headache, facial swelling and visual impairment
caused by the swelling of infected tissues of the face.
Non Invasive
Fungal Sinusitis
The other less troublesome type is the non-invasive form of
fungal sinusitis. This is often initially diagnosed as chronic sinusitis due to
the similarities in symptoms presented. There are two forms of non-invasive
fungal sinusitis ?mycetoma and allergic fungal sinusitis.
Mycetoma
fungal sinusitis, otherwise referred to as fungal ball sinusitis, often infects
the maxillary sinuses with clumps or pores. Thus, the name fungal ball. This is,
perhaps, the mildest form of fungal sinus infection because it usually affects
only one side of the sinus and triggers only the typical discomforts associated
with chronic sinusitis. Surgical removal of infected sinuses is often not
necessary. Most doctors only recommend the surgical scraping of the mold from
the site of infection.
The second form of non-invasive fungal sinusitis
is called allergic fungal sinusitis. As its name suggests, this type roots from
fungi that the body treats sinister. This type is common among patients of
allergic rhinitis.
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