LAS VEGAS (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Thirty-million Americans suffer from
sinus problems. In fact, new studies show patients with chronic sinus
problems miss more work and are less productive than people with any other
chronic disease, including back pain and high blood pressure. Surgery can be
risky and painful, but now there's a new procedure that has sinus sufferers
breathing a sigh of relief.
Little comes between Gary Haman and his golf. He's got his 250-yard-drive
back in play, but for a while, severe headaches and trouble with balance
drove him away.
"Everyday I couldn't smell," he recalled to Ivanhoe. "I couldn't breathe
through my nose very well. I couldn't taste food." Now there's new hope for
sinus sufferers -- illuminated balloon sinuplasty.
"It's kind of like balloon angioplasty, like they were doing for the heart,"
Ashley Sikand, M.D., an otolaryngologist at Ear, Nose and Throat Consultants
of Nevada in Las Vegas, told Ivanhoe.
A guide wire with fiber optic cable leads the way, lighting up the sinus for
doctors. A tiny catheter with a balloon on the end follows it. When the
balloon is in the right place, it's inflated, expanding the sinus opening.
"You're actually moving the bone slightly and studies have shown that it
stays in that position," Dr. Sikand said. "It doesn't regrow back and close
off the sinuses." The balloon is removed and the patient goes home the same
day.
"The opening is enlarged and restores it to normal health," Dr. Sikand
explained.
This procedure produces the same results as traditional surgery, that would
reshape the sinus with less tissue trauma, no incision, little bleeding and
faster recovery.
Just a few weeks after surgery, Haman is breathing easier. He can smell and
taste again.
"My head doesn't hurt so blasted bad so I can focus," he said. "It feels
like I'm just one person instead of like seven inside my head which is a
good thing…" a good thing that's got Haman back into the swing of things.
Balloon sinuplasty is good for people who do not respond to antibiotics and
other sinus problems. The entire surgery usually takes about 15 to 20
minutes.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
Ear Nose and Throat Consultants of Nevada
Las Vegas, NV
http://www.entc.com
(702) 792-6700
info@ENTC.com