Mucocele of a giant inferior turbinate concha bullosa mimics a nasal mass: case report

Abstract Background The concha bullosa is a pneumatized nasal turbinate commonly middle turbinate but that of the inferior turbinate is an uncommon entity. A giant inferior conchal pneumatization with mucocele formation is not reported in the literature till now. Case presentation A 17-year-old fema...

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Main Authors: Kamal Ebeid, Mohamed H. Askar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-07-01
Series:The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s43163-021-00128-3
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spelling doaj-0d5cd5fe69ec483db7f1d64390b606592021-07-11T11:06:43ZengSpringerOpenThe Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology1012-55742090-85392021-07-013711310.1186/s43163-021-00128-3Mucocele of a giant inferior turbinate concha bullosa mimics a nasal mass: case reportKamal Ebeid0Mohamed H. Askar1Otorhinolaryngology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Tanta UniversityOtorhinolaryngology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Tanta UniversityAbstract Background The concha bullosa is a pneumatized nasal turbinate commonly middle turbinate but that of the inferior turbinate is an uncommon entity. A giant inferior conchal pneumatization with mucocele formation is not reported in the literature till now. Case presentation A 17-year-old female patient presented with bilateral severe nasal obstruction. Anterior rhinoscopy and endoscopic examination revealed a giant mass which filled the left nasal cavity completely, pushing the septum to the contralateral side. The paranasal sinus CT showed a mass in the left nasal cavity ballooning the whole nasal cavity with compression of the nasal septum to the right side. MRI was done and the lesion was hyperintense in T2 MRI sequences and hypointense in T1 sequences consistent with a cystic lesion. The patient was consented and prepared for endoscopic resection under general anesthesia. The lesion was completely separated from the nasal septum and the orbit but attached to the lateral nasal wall at the site of origin of the inferior turbinate. Conchoplasty was done and patient follow-up for 9 years is excellent with complete disappearance of all patient symptoms. Conclusions Concha bullosa of the inferior turbinate should be considered in the differential diagnosis of nasal tumors, nasal cystic lesions, and preoperative evaluation of endoscopic sinus surgery. Also, a systematic approach for dealing with nasal lesions with thorough examination and radiological review will be of great value in decision-making. The anatomy of the paranasal should be thoroughly examined prior to endoscopic sinus surgery to develop treatment strategies and to prevent possible complications.https://doi.org/10.1186/s43163-021-00128-3Nasal turbinateConcha bullosaNasal conchaMucoceleNasal massCase report
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kamal Ebeid
Mohamed H. Askar
spellingShingle Kamal Ebeid
Mohamed H. Askar
Mucocele of a giant inferior turbinate concha bullosa mimics a nasal mass: case report
The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
Nasal turbinate
Concha bullosa
Nasal concha
Mucocele
Nasal mass
Case report
author_facet Kamal Ebeid
Mohamed H. Askar
author_sort Kamal Ebeid
title Mucocele of a giant inferior turbinate concha bullosa mimics a nasal mass: case report
title_short Mucocele of a giant inferior turbinate concha bullosa mimics a nasal mass: case report
title_full Mucocele of a giant inferior turbinate concha bullosa mimics a nasal mass: case report
title_fullStr Mucocele of a giant inferior turbinate concha bullosa mimics a nasal mass: case report
title_full_unstemmed Mucocele of a giant inferior turbinate concha bullosa mimics a nasal mass: case report
title_sort mucocele of a giant inferior turbinate concha bullosa mimics a nasal mass: case report
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
issn 1012-5574
2090-8539
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Background The concha bullosa is a pneumatized nasal turbinate commonly middle turbinate but that of the inferior turbinate is an uncommon entity. A giant inferior conchal pneumatization with mucocele formation is not reported in the literature till now. Case presentation A 17-year-old female patient presented with bilateral severe nasal obstruction. Anterior rhinoscopy and endoscopic examination revealed a giant mass which filled the left nasal cavity completely, pushing the septum to the contralateral side. The paranasal sinus CT showed a mass in the left nasal cavity ballooning the whole nasal cavity with compression of the nasal septum to the right side. MRI was done and the lesion was hyperintense in T2 MRI sequences and hypointense in T1 sequences consistent with a cystic lesion. The patient was consented and prepared for endoscopic resection under general anesthesia. The lesion was completely separated from the nasal septum and the orbit but attached to the lateral nasal wall at the site of origin of the inferior turbinate. Conchoplasty was done and patient follow-up for 9 years is excellent with complete disappearance of all patient symptoms. Conclusions Concha bullosa of the inferior turbinate should be considered in the differential diagnosis of nasal tumors, nasal cystic lesions, and preoperative evaluation of endoscopic sinus surgery. Also, a systematic approach for dealing with nasal lesions with thorough examination and radiological review will be of great value in decision-making. The anatomy of the paranasal should be thoroughly examined prior to endoscopic sinus surgery to develop treatment strategies and to prevent possible complications.
topic Nasal turbinate
Concha bullosa
Nasal concha
Mucocele
Nasal mass
Case report
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s43163-021-00128-3
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