Guest guest Posted July 31, 2006 Report Share Posted July 31, 2006 While ago I noted here an article surveying sinusitis (viral, allergic, etc.) from a WM viewpoint incidence rates, treatments, etc. In particular noting that the actual incidence of bacterial involvement amounted to ca. 0.5% to 2.0% of cases, but that some 40% of treated cases were addressed with antibiotics. Now it's reported(1) that there're new WM guidelines (understanding of diagnosis and treatment), and " an innovative new treatment. " The guidelines(2) now recommend antibiotics only for severe symptoms, or after 10-14 days still no mention of testing for presence of bacteria. … " Now is appears that the primary process is inflammation within the sinus lining, and infection is a secondary process. " The new treatment is balloon sinuplasty, i.e. using a balloon catheter in the nasal passages into the sinuses. Advantage is less invasive, hence shorter and easier recovery. The bottom line, to my mind, is not much change, other than abandoning the " long believed " , blatantly non-evidence-based premise that bacterial infection is the problem (the germ-theory bias). This is interesting to us (CM practitioners) as URT inflammation is quite easily and effectively treated with CM, in particular herbal medicine, from the simple patents such as Bi Yan Pian ( " nose inflammation tablets " ), through to more customized Dx and Tx, e.g. treating earth/PiWei deficiency which starves (being mother of) metal/respiratory system. And the surgical approach, traditional methods or, most likely, also the new sinuplasty, often results in minor or only temporary relief. When there's hypersensitivity of the membranes to temperature, viral or allergic agents, and often metabolic weakness (piwei) that sustains such hypersensitivity, structural (yin) alteration by surgery will tend, over time, to be reversed by damage from the functional (yang) chronic inflammatory process. CM treatment of such conditions strengthens the membrane functions vs inflammation rather than suppressing the symptoms (antihistamines, decongestants, etc.), and longer-term treatment of systemic root factors (often constitutional) builds sustained resistance to hypersensitivity. *1 " HealthNews " newsletter (formerly published by the publishers of the New England Journal of Medicine, but since spun off to one of those medical press mills in Florida), Vol. 12, No. 8, August 2006 *2 jointly from both the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, and the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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