Braun Hannes, Buzina Walter, Freudenschuss Kurt, Beham Alfred, Stammberger Heinz
University Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital, Auenbruggerplatz 26/28, 8036 Graz, Austria.
Laryngoscope. 2003 Feb;113(2):264-9. doi: 10.1097/00005537-200302000-00013.
OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: The traditional criteria for the diagnosis of allergic fungal sinusitis include chronic rhinosinusitis, "allergic mucin" (mucus containing clusters of eosinophils), and detection of fungi by means of histological examination or culture. In 1999, a group of Mayo Clinic researchers, with a novel method of mucus collection and fungal culturing technique, were able to find fungi in 96% of patients with chronic rhinosinusitis. Immunoglobulin E-mediated hypersensitivity to fungal allergens was not evident in the majority of their patients. Because the presence of eosinophils in the allergic mucin, not a type I hypersensitivity, is probably the common denominator in the pathophysiology of allergic fungal sinusitis, the Mayo Clinic group proposed a change in terminology from allergic fungal sinusitis to eosinophilic fungal rhinosinusitis. Using new techniques of culturing fungi from nasal secretion, as well as preservation and histological examination of mucus, we investigated the incidence of "eosinophilic fungal rhinosinusitis" in our patient population. STUDY DESIGN METHODS: In an open prospective study nasal mucus from patients with chronic rhinosinusitis as well as from healthy volunteers was cultured for fungi. In patients, who underwent functional endoscopic sinus surgery, nasal mucus was investigated histologically to detect fungi and eosinophils within the mucus.
Fungal cultures were positive in 84 of 92 patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (91.3%). In all, 290 positive cultures grew 33 different genera, with 3.2 species per patient, on average. Fungal cultures from a control group of healthy volunteers yielded positive results in 21 of 23 (91.3%). Histologically, fungal elements were found in 28 of 37 patients (75.5%) and eosinophilic mucin in 35 of 37 patients (94.6%). Neither fungi nor eosinophils were present in 2 of 37 patients (5.4%).
Our data show that the postulated criteria of allergic fungal sinusitis are present in the majority of patients with chronic rhinosinusitis. Either those criteria will be found to be invalid and need to be changed or, indeed, "eosinophilic fungal rhinosinusitis" exists in the majority of patients with chronic rhinosinusitis. Based on our results, fungi and eosinophilic mucin appear to be a standard component of nasal mucus in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis.
目的/假设:变应性真菌性鼻窦炎的传统诊断标准包括慢性鼻-鼻窦炎、“变应性黏液”(含有嗜酸性粒细胞簇的黏液)以及通过组织学检查或培养检测真菌。1999年,梅奥诊所的一组研究人员采用一种新的黏液采集方法和真菌培养技术,在96%的慢性鼻-鼻窦炎患者中发现了真菌。在他们的大多数患者中,未发现免疫球蛋白E介导的对真菌变应原的超敏反应。由于变应性黏液中嗜酸性粒细胞的存在,而非I型超敏反应,可能是变应性真菌性鼻窦炎病理生理学的共同特征,因此梅奥诊所研究小组提议将术语从变应性真菌性鼻窦炎改为嗜酸性粒细胞性真菌性鼻-鼻窦炎。我们使用从鼻分泌物中培养真菌的新技术以及黏液的保存和组织学检查,调查了我们患者群体中“嗜酸性粒细胞性真菌性鼻-鼻窦炎”的发病率。
在一项开放性前瞻性研究中,对慢性鼻-鼻窦炎患者以及健康志愿者的鼻黏液进行真菌培养。对于接受功能性鼻内镜鼻窦手术的患者,对鼻黏液进行组织学检查,以检测黏液中的真菌和嗜酸性粒细胞。
92例慢性鼻-鼻窦炎患者中,84例(91.3%)真菌培养呈阳性。总共290份阳性培养物培养出33个不同的属,平均每位患者培养出3.2种真菌。23名健康志愿者对照组的真菌培养中,21例(91.3%)呈阳性结果。组织学检查发现,37例患者中有28例(75.5%)存在真菌成分,37例患者中有35例(94.6%)存在嗜酸性黏液。37例患者中有2例(5.4%)既未发现真菌也未发现嗜酸性粒细胞。
我们的数据表明,大多数慢性鼻-鼻窦炎患者存在变应性真菌性鼻窦炎的假定标准。要么这些标准被发现无效并需要更改,要么实际上大多数慢性鼻-鼻窦炎患者确实存在“嗜酸性粒细胞性真菌性鼻-鼻窦炎”。根据我们的结果,真菌和嗜酸性黏液似乎是慢性鼻-鼻窦炎患者鼻黏液的标准成分。