- Nasal polyps - Diagnosis and treatment - Mayo Clinic
A treatment known as aspirin desensitization might help people with nasal polyps and asthma who react badly to aspirin An allergy specialist oversees the treatment The treatment involves taking a little more aspirin bit by bit to help the body get used to taking aspirin Surgery to remove the polyps might come before aspirin desensitization
- Nasal Polyps: Symptoms, Causes, Treatment Removal
Nasal polyps are soft, painless, noncancerous growths that can form in the lining of your nose or sinuses They happen most often in people with asthma, allergies, repeat infections or nasal inflammation Medication and outpatient surgery can shrink nasal polyps and relieve symptoms
- Nasal Polyp Removal Without Surgery: Treatment Options - Healthline
Can nasal polyps be removed without surgery? Learn about treatment options and success rates, including nasal sprays, oral medications, nasal polyp suction, and antibiotics
- Nasal Polyps: Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment - Patient
Nasal polyps are fleshy swellings that grow inside the nose or sinuses They are usually non-cancerous (benign) The most common symptoms they cause are a stuffy, runny nose Steroid nasal drops are commonly used to shrink the polyps Surgical removal of polyps is sometimes needed Nasal polyps often return after treatment, so steroid nasal sprays can be used daily to prevent recurrence
- What Medications Treat Nasal Polyps? - WebMD
These are the most common medications used to treat nasal polyps: Topical steroids: This is usually the first treatment doctors recommend for nasal polyps These medications, delivered into your
- Department of ENT Nasal polyps management Dep
with nasal polyps will also have asthma Polyps are usually bilateral, be wary of patients presenting with unilateral symptoms or a unilateral polyp, as this may hera Corticosteroids remain the mainstay of treatment for this condition; care should be taken when the patient is on other corticosteroids to avoid adrenal insufficiency
- Nasal polyps - NHS
Find out about nasal polyps, including symptoms, causes, treatments and when to see a GP
- Nasal Polyps - Johns Hopkins Medicine
Nasal polyps should be diagnosed by your doctor, who will use a nasal endoscope, which is a small thin telescope with a camera on the end, to see inside your nose In some cases your doctor may take a small sample, called a biopsy, of the growth CT or MRI scans of the sinuses can also show findings that suggest presence of nasal polyps Treatment
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