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AFRS review
Pathogenesis
• Underling or acquired hypersensitivity to certain fungal
antigens
• trapping of inhaled fungal antigen within the nasal cavity
& sinuses (5.7x107 spores/day)
• Early and late-phase allergic inflammation with
recruitment of activated eosinophils and lymphocytes
• Mediator release with epithelial damage, mucosal edema,
ostial obstruction stasis of secretion, polyposis,
• Sinus expansion and bony erosion
• 2nd bacterial infection
• direct contact of fungal antigens with inflammatory cells
aggravate the inflammatory process
• symptoms
facial pressure, headache, nasal stuffiness, discharge, and cough.
intractable sinusitis and nasal polyposis.
proptosis or eye muscle entrapment, atopy and multiple surgeries
• Diagnostic criteria (Bent&Kuhn)
type 1 hypersensitivity
nasal polyps
characteristic CT findings
positive fungal stain or culture
allergic mucin
• Eosinophilic fungal rhinosinusitis
Eosinophilic mucin rhinosinusitis
GMS stain of nasal
secretions
• Treatment of choice generally is surgery
Systemic steroids may be indicated: prednisone (0.5
mg/kg)
Topical nasal steroids are helpful postoperatively.
Aggressive nasal salt-water washes are recommended.
Immune therapy for specific allergens is controversial
AFRS cycle
Saline irrigation
surgery
Inhaled fungus
Proliferation
Antigen exposure
Stasis of secretion
Decreased ventilation & drainage
Genetic predisposition
(atopy)
Type I & III reaction
Anatomic obstruction
Bacterial sinusitis
Mast cell & eosinophil degranulation
Immune complex formation?
Mucosal edema & inflammation
Immunotherapy
steroid
Hypothetic pathogenesis of EFRS
• Underling or acquired hypersensitivity to certain
fungal antigens
• trapping of inhaled fungal antigen within the nasal
cavity & sinuses
• direct contact of fungal antigens with epithelial
cells and release cytokine (TSLP, IL-6, IL-8, GMCSF, etc)
• Activated dendritic cells & T- lymphocytes
polarization
• Increase tissue eosinophils and phagocytic activity
• eosinophil migrate to nasal and sinus cavity to
attack fungal elements and release granule protein
• mucosal epithelial cells damage with
mucosal edema, ostial obstruction, polyposis
• direct contact of fungal antigens with inflammatory
Treatment of EFRS based on pathophysiology
• Surgery
temporary decrease antigenic load
• Steroid
decrease inflammatory response
• Antifungals (topical)
decrease allergenic load