Dr. Cody Aull | West Palm Beach Breathe Free
Dr. Cody Aull | West Palm Beach Breathe Free
- The average lifetime cost of managing acute sinusitis is $38,515.
- The management of sinusitis in the United States exceeds $11 billion per year overall.
- There are minimally invasive treatment options for sinusitis that can provide long term results and reduce healthcare costs.
"Balloon sinuplasty is targeted for patients with mild to moderate symptoms," Aull told South Palm Beach Today. "It can be used even for patients with severe sinus problems, depending on what it looks like once we evaluate it."
Chronic sinusitis is a condition where the sinuses, the spaces inside your nose and head, become inflamed and swollen for three months or more, according to the Mayo Clinic. That can disrupt the normal drainage of mucus, leading to nasal congestion and difficulty breathing through the nose. As a result, individuals may experience a stuffy nose, and the area around their eyes may feel tender and swollen. Symptoms include infections, nasal polyps (abnormal growths in the sinuses) or inflammation of the sinus lining. Both adults and children can be affected by this condition.
If left untreated, however, sinusitis can have a high financial cost. According to a study published in PubMed, the lifetime cost of managing sinusitis could amount to roughly $38,515. Some of the factors involved include the cost of antibiotics and time lost from work.
The American Academy of Otolaryngology reported that approximately 1 in 8 adults in the United States are affected by sinusitis, leading to more than 30 million diagnoses each year. They also noted that the management of acute and chronic sinusitis incurs a direct cost of more than $11 billion annually.
Instead of paying the high costs of sinusitis, you can seek long-term treatment options such as balloon sinuplasty, a safe, minimally invasive procedure used by surgeons to address chronic sinusitis, according to Nuffield Health. During the process, doctors insert a guide wire equipped with a small balloon into the nostrils and navigate it to the blockage.
"Most people with severe sinus problems have already undergone a maximally aggressive surgery, because those have been around for a while now," Aull explained. "If that needs to be done, we can still do those things in such a way that you wouldn't even necessarily notice that it was more aggressive."
To learn more about sinus symptoms and treatments, take this free quiz.