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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 18 page paper which examines the current diagnosis and treatment of this common medical condition. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
18 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGsinus.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
some $6 billion in yearly direct healthcare expenditures (Advice From Your Allergist... Sinusitis, 2001; Alper and Hickner, 2005; Leggett, 2004). Too often mistaken for a cold, sinusitis is nonetheless
diagnosed in one out of every six adults, but researchers believe the incidences may be higher since nearly a quarter of affected people do not seek medical treatment (Leggett, 2004).
In children and adults alike, sinusitis is typically the aftereffect of a cold or upper respiratory infection, and it occurs most frequently in the winter, spring, and fall seasons
and in the geographical regions of the US Midwest and South (Leggett, 2004). Sinusitis has been medically defined as "an inflammation of the mucosal surface of the paranasal sinuses... in
which retention of secretions results in inflammation and bacterial infection within the cavity" (Ansari et al, 2004, p. 144; Advice From Your Allergist... Sinusitis, 2001, p. 168). Sinuses are
the air-filled cavities that reside in the skull, which customarily contain a thin layer of mucus that ensnares as dust, germs, and other foreign bodies that may exist in the
air (Advice From Your Allergist... Sinusitis, 2001). Cilia, or microscopic hairs in the sinuses, are responsible for directing the mucus (and whatever substances that have become trapped in it)
toward openings known as ostia, which lead to a passageway in the back of the throat where mucus slides into the stomach, where it is digested as a normal bodily
function (Advice From Your Allergist... Sinusitis, 2001). Sinusitis is a disruption of this process and occurs when swollen mucus membranes block the ostia, which then traps mucus into the
sinuses (Advice From Your Allergist... Sinusitis, 2001). This trapped mucus can house a buildup of bacteria and fungi that can cause infections of varying intensity (Advice From Your Allergist...
...