Paranasal sinus fungus ball: diagnosis and management

Paranasal sinus fungus ball is an extramucosal mycosis, usually occurring in immunocompetent people as a monolateral lesion. To review the literature data and to report the Policlinico S. Matteo, University of Pavia experience, 81 patients presenting paranasal fungus ball have been treated (January...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mycoses 2007-11, Vol.50 (6), p.451-456
Hauptverfasser: Pagella, Fabio, Matti, Elina, Bernardi, Francesca De, Semino, Lucia, Cavanna, Caterina, Marone, Piero, Farina, Claudio, Castelnuovo, Paolo
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container_end_page 456
container_issue 6
container_start_page 451
container_title Mycoses
container_volume 50
creator Pagella, Fabio
Matti, Elina
Bernardi, Francesca De
Semino, Lucia
Cavanna, Caterina
Marone, Piero
Farina, Claudio
Castelnuovo, Paolo
description Paranasal sinus fungus ball is an extramucosal mycosis, usually occurring in immunocompetent people as a monolateral lesion. To review the literature data and to report the Policlinico S. Matteo, University of Pavia experience, 81 patients presenting paranasal fungus ball have been treated (January 1994 to May 2005). Twenty-seven men and 54 women (19-91 years old; mean 49.4 years) were considered. Seventy-three patients had a single sinus affected, but eight presented multiple localisations. Maxillary was the most involved sinus followed by sphenoidal and ethmoidal. Moulds have been isolated in 28/81 cases. Histology showed fungal colonisation but not invasion in all cases. Tomography showed bone erosion in 33.3% of patients. All have been treated only by functional endoscopic sinus surgery. Seventy-seven of 81 patients have been cured. Four of 81 patients needed another surgical treatment. Follow up was between 6 and 132 months (average: 63 months). Fungus ball is a sinusal pathology caused by mycetes like Aspergillus spp. Histology confirms the fungal aethiology excluding tissue invasion. Mycological culture consented to identify the pathogenic mould in 34.5% of cases. Actually functional endoscopic sinus surgery is the gold standard for treatment of this pathology, and antifungal therapy is unnecessary.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1439-0507.2007.01416.x
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To review the literature data and to report the Policlinico S. Matteo, University of Pavia experience, 81 patients presenting paranasal fungus ball have been treated (January 1994 to May 2005). Twenty-seven men and 54 women (19-91 years old; mean 49.4 years) were considered. Seventy-three patients had a single sinus affected, but eight presented multiple localisations. Maxillary was the most involved sinus followed by sphenoidal and ethmoidal. Moulds have been isolated in 28/81 cases. Histology showed fungal colonisation but not invasion in all cases. Tomography showed bone erosion in 33.3% of patients. All have been treated only by functional endoscopic sinus surgery. Seventy-seven of 81 patients have been cured. Four of 81 patients needed another surgical treatment. Follow up was between 6 and 132 months (average: 63 months). Fungus ball is a sinusal pathology caused by mycetes like Aspergillus spp. Histology confirms the fungal aethiology excluding tissue invasion. 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subjects Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Aspergillosis - diagnosis
Aspergillosis - microbiology
Aspergillosis - surgery
Aspergillus
Aspergillus fumigatus - isolation & purification
endoscopic sinus surgery
Endoscopy
Ethmoid Sinus - microbiology
Female
Fungi - classification
Fungi - isolation & purification
fungus ball
Humans
Male
Maxillary Sinus - microbiology
Middle Aged
Mycoses - diagnosis
Mycoses - microbiology
Mycoses - surgery
Paranasal Sinus Diseases - diagnosis
Paranasal Sinus Diseases - microbiology
Paranasal Sinus Diseases - surgery
paranasal sinuses
Sphenoid Sinus - microbiology
title Paranasal sinus fungus ball: diagnosis and management
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