Кирпичик

When to See a Doctor For a Sinus Infection

Visit your doctor when you feel pain or pressure in your upper face together with nasal congestion or discharge, postnasal drip or ongoing bad breath unrelated to dental problems.

Simple congestion and a low-grade fever is probably a cold, and special medication or antibiotics are not required. But together with facial pain or headaches, it may well be a sinus infection.

Rare but possible sinus infection complications

The following symptoms require immediate hospital treatment:

Examination and how a sinus infection is diagnosed

Sinusitus must be distinguished from a simple upper respiratory infection, common cold or migraine.

After going through your history, your doctor would examine your throat, nose and sinuses. He would peer in your nose for signs of polyps, shine a light against the sinus for signs of inflammation and tap over a sinus area looking for infection.

If he finds red swollen nasal passages, pus-like drainage from the nasal passages, tenderness when he taps your cheeks or forehead, and swelling around the eyes and cheeks, he would most likely diagnose you with a sinus infection.

If it fails to respond to treatment, you may be referred to an ear, nose and throat (ENT) specialist who specializes in sinusitis. Because regular x-rays of the sinuses are unreliable for diagnosing sinusitis, more in-depth, expensive tests may be required.

If your sinus disease is chronic or does not improve after several rounds of antibiotics, laboratory tests may be carried out:

Exit mobile version