Ahmad Sedaghat, MD
Ahmad Sedaghat, MD, associate professor of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at the University of Cincinnati.
Chronic sinusitis is a common condition that affects up to one in 20 people in the United States. Yet many people who have it never get properly diagnosed because they blame their symptoms on something else—usually allergies. Getting an accurate diagnosis and the right treatments could help a lot of people breathe easier.
Chronic sinusitis (or, more accurately, rhinosinusitis) is an inflammation of the nasal passages and sinuses that lasts for at least three months. The typical symptoms include facial pain or pressure, a congested or dripping nose, and a diminished sense of smell. Many people with chronic sinusitis also have nasal allergies, which can make symptoms worse. But the allergies aren’t the underlying cause.
Unlike the acute attack of sinusitis you might get after a cold, chronic sinusitis isn’t usually caused by infection. While people with chronic sinusitis can get sinus infections, their symptoms persist even when the infections are gone.
In fact, chronic sinusitis is a condition much like asthma. People with asthma have inflamed airways in their lungs that swell and produce excess mucus in response to a variety of triggers. People with chronic sinusitis have tissues in their nose and sinuses that overreact in much the same ways. Pollen, viruses, bacteria, or fungi might trigger the inflammation, but so might cigarette smoke or other forms of air pollution. And what causes problems in one person may not in someone else.
If you feel like you have endless allergies or a cold that never quits, you might have chronic sinusitis. The big tip-off is having at least two of these symptoms for at least three months:
In addition to these primary symptoms, some people with chronic sinusitis may cough because of post-nasal drip and feel pressure in their ears. Many people report poor sleep and fatigue or “brain fog.”
If your doctor suspects chronic sinusitis, you will need a test to confirm or rule out the diagnosis. One possibility is a CT scan, which can produce images of the inside of your head. The pictures can show any swelling inside your sinuses and whether you have polyps, noncancerous growths that can develop in inflamed sinuses and nasal passages. Not everyone with chronic sinusitis has polyps.
If you see an ear, nose and throat doctor, you will likely get a different test: a nasal endoscopy. For this procedure, done in the doctor’s office, a lighted scope will be passed up your nose so the doctor can get a good look at the nasal lining. Unless you’ve had sinus surgery, the scope won’t fit through the narrow slits inside your nose that lead to your sinuses, but the doctor will be able to look for signs of inflammation, including thick mucus and any polyps in the area where the sinuses drain into the nose.
Also, the doctor will consider whether you might have other conditions linked with sinusitis. For example, some people with immune deficiencies are prone to sinusitis. So are people with forms of vasculitis, rarer conditions involving blood vessel inflammation.
If you do have chronic sinusitis, there are two easy things you can try that make most people feel better:
An increasingly used alternative: With a doctor’s prescription, you can get a liquid corticosteroid that can be added to your saline rinse. This combo may help the steroid reach deeper into the affected sinuses.
Additional drugs might be used in some situations:
If you don’t get relief from nasal rinses and medications, you might consider surgery. Using a scope inserted in your nose, a surgeon will remove any polyps and widen the openings of your sinuses to improve drainage and allow medications to better reach inflamed tissues. Surgery helps many people, but it’s not a cure, so you should expect to continue medications and nasal rinses after your procedure.
Nasal rinses are an effective treatment for chronic sinusitis, if you do them correctly. A few guidelines: