Study of allergic fungal sinusitis in 40 surgical cases of chronic paranasal sinusitis
2002
Allergic fungal sinusitis is chronic and paranasal, related to fungal allergy. Many papers on allergic fungal sinusitis have been reported in the United State, and the incidence is 5% to 10% among patients with chronic paranasal sinusitis. Although cases of allergic fungal sinusitis have been reported in Japan, the incidence is unclear. We studied allergic fungal sinusitis in 40 consecutive patients-26 men and 14 women-undergoing endoscopic sinus surgery at Keiyukai Sapporo Hospital December 2000 to July 2001. We checked for allergic rhinitis and asthma, a history of surgery for nasal polyps and chronic sinusitis, the presence of nasal polyps, grading of sinusitis via computed tomography, nonspecific IgE and allergen-specific IgE for fungi in serum, eosinophilia in nasal smears, paranasal eosinophilic mucin, and histology and fungal culture of paranasal sinus mucus. None had typical allergic fungal sinusitis, but 1 had eosinophilic paranasal mucin, high IgE, and false-positive IgE for fungi. We studied clinical data and histology of fungi and paranasal mucosa in 9 cases with fungal maxillary sinusitis, but none had allergy or eosinophilc mucin. This suggested that few patients with allergic fungal sinusitis exist among those with chronic paranasal sinusitis.
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