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  2. Rhinosinusitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhinosinusitis

    The functional unity of the two mucosa speaks in favor of this replacement. A distinction is made between acute and chronic rhinosinusitis. Acute sinusitis lasts a maximum of 12 weeks. The clinical symptoms of acute rhinosinusitis are purulent nasal secretion, nasal obstruction and/or tension headache or feeling of fullness in the facial area ...

  3. Sinusitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinusitis

    Sinusitis, also known as rhinosinusitis, is an inflammation of the mucous membranes that line the sinuses resulting in symptoms that may include production of thick nasal mucus, nasal congestion, facial congestion, facial pain, facial pressure, loss of smell, or fever. [6] [7] Sinusitis is a condition that affects both children and adults.

  4. Rhinitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhinitis

    Rhinitis is categorized into three types (although infectious rhinitis is typically regarded as a separate clinical entity due to its transient nature): (i) infectious rhinitis includes acute and chronic bacterial infections; (ii) nonallergic rhinitis [14] includes vasomotor, idiopathic, hormonal, atrophic, occupational, and gustatory rhinitis, as well as rhinitis medicamentosa (rebound ...

  5. These signs of a severe sinus infection are often under ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/signs-severe-sinus-infection-often...

    A sinus infection typically starts out with a viral infection (RSV or rhinovirus, for example), which can cause sneezing, coughing, a runny nose, aches, and a fever, says Goudy.

  6. Aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspirin-exacerbated...

    Differential diagnosis: Allergic rhinitis, nonallergic rhinitis, nonallergic rhinitis with eosinophilia syndrome (NARES) Management: Inhaled and intranasal corticosteroids, aspirin desensitization and therapy, biologics, sinus surgery, diet, antileukotrienes: Frequency: 0.3–0.9% (general population, US), ~7% of asthmatics [3]

  7. Upper respiratory tract infection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_respiratory_tract...

    Rhinitis affects the nasal mucosa, while rhinosinusitis or sinusitis affects the nose and paranasal sinuses, including frontal, ethmoid, maxillary, and sphenoid sinuses. Nasopharyngitis (rhinopharyngitis or the common cold) affects the nares, pharynx, hypopharynx, uvula, and tonsils generally. Without involving the nose, pharyngitis inflames ...

  8. Allergy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allergy

    Vasomotor rhinitis, for example, is one of many illnesses that share symptoms with allergic rhinitis, underscoring the need for professional differential diagnosis. [127] Once a diagnosis of asthma, rhinitis, anaphylaxis, or other allergic disease has been made, there are several methods for discovering the causative agent of that allergy.

  9. Differential diagnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differential_diagnosis

    Machine differential diagnosis is the use of computer software to partly or fully make a differential diagnosis. It may be regarded as an application of artificial intelligence. Alternatively, it may be seen as "augmented intelligence" if it meets the FDA criteria, namely that (1) it reveals the underlying data, (2) reveals the underlying logic ...