Published online Jan 26, 2020. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v8.i2.451
Peer-review started: October 30, 2019
First decision: December 4, 2019
Revised: December 21, 2019
Accepted: January 2, 2020
Article in press: January 2, 2020
Published online: January 26, 2020
Processing time: 78 Days and 13.5 Hours
Fungal rhinosinusitis is an infectious and/or allergic disease caused by fungi in the sinus and nasal cavity. Due to the warm and humid climate in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, the incidence of fungal rhinosinusitis is higher than that in other provinces. However, its physiological mechanism is not yet clear. Not every patient colonized by fungi develops a fungal infection. To a large extent, the immune status of the patient determines the nature of fungal disease in the nasal passages. The pathologic process of progression from harmless fungal colonization to fungal rhinosinusitis is unclear and has not been reported.
We report two patients, one who developed fungal rhinosinusitis 1.5 years after surgery performed to treat an inverted papilloma, and the other with a history of hypertension and cerebral infarction. Both patients recovered from their surgeries. An average time of 2.5 years elapsed from the development of maxillary sinus cysts to the development of fungal rhinosinusitis.
According to these case reports, we speculate that the progression of fungal rhinosinusitis from harmless colonization to disease onset requires approximately one to three years and that the length of the process may be related to underlying diseases, surgical treatment, deficient autoimmune status, and abuse of hormone antibiotics and hormones. Additional data are needed to conduct relevant studies to appropriately prevent and treat fungal rhinosinusitis.
Core tip: Due to the warm and humid climate in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, the incidence of fungal rhinosinusitis is higher than that in other provinces. But the physiological mechanism is not yet clear. In this paper, we report two such cases in an unprecedented way and describe the complete pathologic progression from harmless fungal colonization to fungal sinusitis. We speculate that the onset process of fungal rhinosinusitis from scratch takes about one to three years, and the length of the process may be related to the basic diseases, surgical treatment, low autoimmune status, and abuse of hormone antibiotics and hormones. These findings may have implications for the treatment and prevention of fungal rhinosinusitis.