Scientific Study: Sinusitis is related to a high risk of “rheumatism”
A scientific study, the results of which were published in the Journal of the British Medical Association for Rheumatology, found a correlation between sinusitis and an increase in the risk of rheumatism. The study said that the date of sinusitis increases the risk of rheumatism by 40%. The study also found that the association becomes stronger in the case of self -immune diseases, as the risk increases by 7 times in the syndrome of phosphorical fats causing arterial lumps, and the weakness in the “saguran” syndrome, in which immunity attacks the endocrine glands. The study said that the general inflammatory condition with sinusitis increases the risk of developing a diagnosis of rheumatoid disease, especially in the five years, to the tithe before the beginning of the symptoms. Sinusitis is found in the lining of the sinuses, which are small cavities full of air behind the cheekbones and the front. Details of the study. Previous research indicates a connection between different types of lung irritants, including air pollution and respiratory infections, and the development of rheumatoid arthritis, but it is not clear whether sinusitis can also be a stimulating factor for other types of rheumatic diseases. In an attempt to bridge this cognitive gap, the researchers used data from the “rochester” epidemiology project, a system for linking medical records to more than 500,000 people residing in Olmestad County, Minnesota, between 1966 and 2014. Who were recently diagnosed with autonomous rheumatic, such as rheumatoid arthritis, phosphorous hypnota syndrome, “performing” syndrome, vasculitis, giant cell inflammation and rheumatic muscle pain. Acute sinusitis is related to an increased risk of rheumatoid arthritis by 18%, a condition in which symptoms of rheumatism occur, but without the presence of antibodies that can be detected. The relationship between sinusitis and newly diagnosed rheumatoid diseases was stronger in the five years to the preceding of the beginning of the symptoms, as the risk was generally 70% higher, but three times higher for Sijujran syndrome, and twice for rheumatic muscle pain. The more romance of sinusitis attacks, the greater the chances of diagnosing a new rheumatic disease. For example, those suffering from 7 or more attacks were almost five times more likely to diagnose their systemic auto -immune diseases, and almost 9 times the possibility of diagnosing it with Sijujran’s syndrome, and twice more likely to diagnose vasculitis. Selected attacks of sinusitis without a previous date have also shown a significant relationship between the reaction to the dose and the rheumatoid arthritis, as the danger has risen to four times in 5 or more attacks. In general, the relationship between sinusitis and rheumatic diseases was stronger in people who have never smoked. This study is a monitoring, so it is not possible to withdraw final conclusions about causal factors, but in general these results indicate the role of sinusitis in the rise of rheumatic disease and may cause it.