Rhinosporidiosis: Various Presentations and Different Sites

Introduction Rhinosporidiosis commonly affects nasal mucosa but may have varied presentations depending upon the site of involvement. Materials and Methods 119 patients of rhinosporidiosis, attending the two medical colleges of West Bengal over a period of two years were reviewed. Results Gran...

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Published in:Bengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery
Main Authors: Saumendra Nath Bandopadhyay, Utpal Jana, Gautam Bandopadhyay, Tapas Kumar Majhi, Shubhrakanti Sen, Soumyarup Das, Ipsita Mandal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Association of Otolaryngologists of India, West Bengal 2015-08-01
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Online Access:https://bjohns.in/journal3/index.php/bjohns/article/view/43
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author Saumendra Nath Bandopadhyay
Utpal Jana
Gautam Bandopadhyay
Tapas Kumar Majhi
Shubhrakanti Sen
Soumyarup Das
Ipsita Mandal
author_facet Saumendra Nath Bandopadhyay
Utpal Jana
Gautam Bandopadhyay
Tapas Kumar Majhi
Shubhrakanti Sen
Soumyarup Das
Ipsita Mandal
author_sort Saumendra Nath Bandopadhyay
collection DOAJ
container_title Bengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery
description Introduction Rhinosporidiosis commonly affects nasal mucosa but may have varied presentations depending upon the site of involvement. Materials and Methods 119 patients of rhinosporidiosis, attending the two medical colleges of West Bengal over a period of two years were reviewed. Results Granulomatous lesion in the nose and nasopharynx was the commonest presentation. The most common symptoms were nasal obstruction, bleeding from the nose and nasal discharge. The less commonly involved sites were the eye, penis, skin, subcutaneous tissue, muscle and bone. Discussion Most of the extranasal rhinosporisdiosis were secondary to nasal disease. Extranasal lesions do not have the typical granular polypoid appearance of the nasal and nasopharyngeal rhinosporidiosis. Extranasal rhinosporidiosis could be excised with minimal operative bleeding. Conclusion Rhinosporidiosis has nasal and extranasal presentations. This chronic disease may also present acutely with respiratory distress or haemorrhage. A high degree of suspicion helps the diagnosis of extranasal rhinosporidiosis. FNAC helps in the diagnosis. Histopathology is confirmatory.
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spelling doaj-art-bc949f4e2c0d4bc8af97ea229ee2fdae2025-08-19T22:48:59ZengThe Association of Otolaryngologists of India, West BengalBengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery2395-24072015-08-0123210.47210/bjohns.2015.v23i2.43Rhinosporidiosis: Various Presentations and Different SitesSaumendra Nath Bandopadhyay0Utpal Jana1Gautam Bandopadhyay2Tapas Kumar Majhi3Shubhrakanti Sen4Soumyarup Das5Ipsita Mandal6Medical College, KolkataCollege of Medicine and Sagar Dutta Medical College, KamarhatiR.G. Kar Medical College,West Bengal, India.NRS Medical College, KolkataNRS Medical College, KolkataDumdum Specialized Municipality HospitalKanchrapara ESI ClinicIntroduction Rhinosporidiosis commonly affects nasal mucosa but may have varied presentations depending upon the site of involvement. Materials and Methods 119 patients of rhinosporidiosis, attending the two medical colleges of West Bengal over a period of two years were reviewed. Results Granulomatous lesion in the nose and nasopharynx was the commonest presentation. The most common symptoms were nasal obstruction, bleeding from the nose and nasal discharge. The less commonly involved sites were the eye, penis, skin, subcutaneous tissue, muscle and bone. Discussion Most of the extranasal rhinosporisdiosis were secondary to nasal disease. Extranasal lesions do not have the typical granular polypoid appearance of the nasal and nasopharyngeal rhinosporidiosis. Extranasal rhinosporidiosis could be excised with minimal operative bleeding. Conclusion Rhinosporidiosis has nasal and extranasal presentations. This chronic disease may also present acutely with respiratory distress or haemorrhage. A high degree of suspicion helps the diagnosis of extranasal rhinosporidiosis. FNAC helps in the diagnosis. Histopathology is confirmatory.https://bjohns.in/journal3/index.php/bjohns/article/view/43RhinosporidiosisRhinosporidiumDiagnosis, DifferentialNoseUrethraSkin
spellingShingle Saumendra Nath Bandopadhyay
Utpal Jana
Gautam Bandopadhyay
Tapas Kumar Majhi
Shubhrakanti Sen
Soumyarup Das
Ipsita Mandal
Rhinosporidiosis: Various Presentations and Different Sites
Rhinosporidiosis
Rhinosporidium
Diagnosis, Differential
Nose
Urethra
Skin
title Rhinosporidiosis: Various Presentations and Different Sites
title_full Rhinosporidiosis: Various Presentations and Different Sites
title_fullStr Rhinosporidiosis: Various Presentations and Different Sites
title_full_unstemmed Rhinosporidiosis: Various Presentations and Different Sites
title_short Rhinosporidiosis: Various Presentations and Different Sites
title_sort rhinosporidiosis various presentations and different sites
topic Rhinosporidiosis
Rhinosporidium
Diagnosis, Differential
Nose
Urethra
Skin
url https://bjohns.in/journal3/index.php/bjohns/article/view/43
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AT tapaskumarmajhi rhinosporidiosisvariouspresentationsanddifferentsites
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