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An estimated 37 million people are afflicted with sinusitis, infection of the sinuses, and its related conditions each year.
But sinusitis can be hard to diagnose, especially in children – and sometimes it can even mimic other ailments.
Four-year-old Carsten, for example, was brought into the ER with a lump on his head.
He was hit while playing t-ball, and a week later still has headaches.
“ Carson looked very good on exam,” says Dr. Michael Mallory, of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. “His neurological exam was non-focal; he was actually happy and playful. He was still complaining of a headache and he had tenderness at the left side of the head.”
To see if Carsten’s skull might be fractured or if there is bleeding, the doctor orders a CAT scan.
According to the CT scan, the boy did not suffer a skull fracture. It did show, however, a sinus infection on the left sign of Carsten’s nose.
And sinusitis can cause persistent headaches.
“I think it was in this instance it was coincidence, that he had a sinusitis,” says Dr. Mallory. The entire constellation seem to fit for both, possibly a head injury – but sinusitis can cause the same symptoms.”
Carsten gets antibiotics for his sinusitis, and is sent home.
“Given the findings on the X-ray and given his headache,” says the doctor, “I felt like it was worthwhile to treat him with antibiotics. This is not something that I expect his mother to have picked up, and sometimes it is just an incidental finding.”
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