Sinusitis Treatment PA Practices - How They Relieve Sinusitis Problems

By Lea O. Mills


Thousands of Americans suffer from sinus related health issues each year reach a point where they feel like they ought to investigate their sinusitis treatment PA medical options in an effort to ease or correct their conditions. Many of these problems are a direct result from nasal (or sinus) blockages like nasal polyps, allergies, or turbinate hypertrophy, which can all block nasal passages and make it difficult to breathe properly. Here is a little information about these conditions and the treatments used to correct them:

Nasal polyps are small vascular growths connected to the surface of the mucous membrane of the sinus passageway. Asthma, recurring infections, sensitivity to drugs, sinusitis, and autoimmune disorders often produce the chronic inflammation that prompts these growths to surface. Whatever the reason is behind a specific case, larger polyps can block sinus pathways and make it hard for people to breathe while carrying out their daily activities like playing sports and exercising.

Nasal polyps can be removed by medical professionals using an image guided endoscope (a narrow, flexible tube that has a lighted magnifying lens or tiny camera) to do sinus surgery. This allows the doctor to clearly see the nasal passageway and polyps, so that he, or she, can remove them cleanly and without leaving any visible incision marks. This type of sinusitis treatment pa is, therefore, and un-invasive way to remove nasal polyps, and clear nasal passageways to allow proper drainage and air flow.

A deviated septum (the section dividing the nasal passages) is another common nasal problem, which is caused when one of the passageways is off center. This causes the structures on one side of the nasal passage (a turbinate) to be smaller than the other, and produces a biological response in that side that prompts the nasal valve to enlarge the smaller turbinate to compensate for the imbalance. Since the nasal cavity cannot accommodate the enlarged turbinate, the patient's airflow is blocked or severely limited. This condition is referred to as a "turbinate hypertrophy", and in severe cases may completely obstruct a patient's nasal air passages and make it impossible for them to breathe correctly or comfortably.

However, an image guided allergy treatment pa called septoplasty (which is similar to an endoscopy) can address and correct a turbinate hypertrophy by taking out the excess bone, tissue, and cartilage to straighten out the deviated septum. If the turbinate hypertrophy triggered a significant size difference in the turbinate, it might be necessary to remove the excess tissue, in addition to doing the septoplasty, to completely equal out the two nasal passages. Ideally, this reduction of excess turbinate will clear the blockage and help the patient to breathe normally once again.




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