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Allergic Fungal Rhinosinusitis

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Well, we saw a case of a fungus ball and I mentioned that

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with allergic fungal rhinosinusitis, you generally see a more diffuse process

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that may lead to polyps in the nasal cavity or within the paranasal sinuses.

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Allergic fungal sinusitis, usually immunocompetent individual, potentially

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with a history of allergy or asthma or aspirin sensitivity, it's unilateral

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or in the nasal cavity in six out of seven cases,

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usually high density on all the CT scans in the nasal cavity as

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well as in the paranasal sinuses. And this may have intermediate or high

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signal intensity on T1 weighted scan, so, bright on T1. Again,

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we are going to think about hemorrhage, we're going to think about the

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presence of fat. In the sinonasal cavity, we also worry about melanin and

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the potential for a sinonasal melanoma. However, inspissated secretions

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and allergic fungal sinusitis with paramagnetism secondary to manganese

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or magnesium, might also be a potential etiology. By and large,

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this is going to be dark in signal intensity on T2 weighted scan, and

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usually, without showing gadolinium enhancement. So here is the stereotypical

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feature of the allergic fungal sinusitis. You see central hyper density

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to the secretions. You see expansion of the sinus with a polypoid look to

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it. And yet there is this periphery of lower density along the peripheral

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mucosa. This is affecting bilaterally. You see ethmoid sinus involvement,

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again, with the periphery of the low density.

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And you also see involvement of the nasal cavity, so not just the

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ethmoids but coming down into the nasal cavity with polyposis. This is another

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example where you have a opacified maxillary antrum, which is protruding

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into the nasal cavity. This is not a bilateral process, this is not

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a diffuse process. This is an example, again, of a fungus ball where

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you have complete opacification and expansion of one of the paranasal sinuses,

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usually not bilateral process. Hyper attenuating; in this case, without

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calcification, showed you a case previously with calcification. This also

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will be dark on T2 weighted scan because of the inspissated secretions and

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or the calcification. And you may also see thickening of the bony walls,

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the so called osteitis that is a indicator for chronic sinusitis.

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Let's move from the more benign fungal sinusitis cases to the more aggressive

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fungal sinusitis. And the two things we've referred to are acute invasive

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and chronic invasive fungal sinusitis. With the acute invasive fungal sinusitis,

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it's usually in a patient who is immunocompromised, sometimes with diabetes,

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sometimes immunosuppressed. And this is a very aggressive infection that

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is associated with gross erosion of the bone and infiltration of the adjacent

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tissue. By adjacent tissue, sometimes I'm referring to the orbits, which

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can be devastating because you can develop a very severe, aggressive,

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orbital cellulitis. But the other area where it may grow into the soft

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tissues is the cavernous sinus and the intracranial compartment. In this

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situation, you may show cavernous sinus thrombophlebitis. You may see carotid

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artery involvement with vasculitis and thromboembolism. You may see meningitis

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with associated mycotic epidural abscess. This is usually not hyper attenuating

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because it's a very aggressive infection that doesn't accumulate the

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hyper proteinaceous secretions associated with it. It's usually low signal

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intensity on T2 weighted scan. And what's also kind of curious about this

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lesion is that it shows absence of contrast enhancement, in part because

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it's a necrotic or necrosing process. So look for the bone erosion,

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look for low signal on T2, look for absence of mucosal enhancement,

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as this fungus just goes right through the

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mucosal surface. Here is example of invasive fungal sinusitis. We see the

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sphenoid sinus with soft tissue within it. We also see some anterior ethmoid

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and frontal sinus, but more importantly, we see the erosion of the lateral

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wall of the left sphenoid sinus. From there, you see a process which

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is infiltrating the left cavernous sinus, compare that with the normal right

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cavernous sinus. Within the cavernous sinus is low signal intensity tissue,

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and in this case, the cavernous sinus is enhancing some of the infectious

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soft tissue is not showing enhancement. And you can see that this is

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going from the cavernous sinus onto the surface of the pons. So this

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is meningitis and spread along the blood vessel, in this case,

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the posterior communicating artery, and then encasing the basilar artery.

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So we have a pretty serious vasculitis. The next thing that generally happens

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in these patients is that they throw septic emboli. Now for those of

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you who are a little bit more observant, you might notice that there

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is contrast enhancement of the cortex on the left side. And indeed,

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this patient does not show a good flow void to the internal carotid artery.

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Here's the black of the flow void of the normal right internal carotid artery,

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here's no flow void in the left internal carotid artery. The left internal

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carotid artery is thrombosed by the invasive fungal sinusitis, leading to

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an infarction involving the middle cerebral artery distribution manifested

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on the post gad by the gyriform enhancement of the left temporal lobe.

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Very, very poor prognosis. Very hard to cure this illness once it's gotten

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into the cavernous sinus and the intracranial compartment.

Report

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Paranasal sinuses

Neuroradiology

MRI

Infectious

Head and Neck

Emergency

CT

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