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- Nasal Polyp Surgery: Recovery, Cost, and More - Healthline
While surgery is one option to treat nasal polyps, they can come back Here's how surgery for nasal polyps works, plus recovery, cost, and outlook
- 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
- What Its Like to Have Nasal Polyp Surgery - WebMD
When medicine isn't enough to improve your nasal polyps, you may need surgery Learn more about what to expect from nasal polyp surgery
- Nasal Polyps Surgery: Recovery - Verywell Health
Nasal polyps are benign (noncancerous) growths in the lining of your nose or sinuses that can significantly impact your breathing If medications haven't been successful with shrinking them, you might have them surgically removed Learn more about recovery from nasal polyps surgery in this article
- What to Expect With Surgery for Nasal Polyps
Medication doesn’t always get rid of nasal polyps If you’re struggling with nasal or sinus issues due to polyps, despite using medicine to treat them, you may be a candidate for nasal polyp removal surgery
- 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 Surgery: What to Expect and How to Recover
What to expect during nasal polyp surgery Nasal polyp surgery is usually performed under general anesthesia, meaning you will be asleep and pain-free throughout the procedure In select cases, local anesthesia with sedation might be appropriate depending on your medical profile and surgeon’s assessment
- Nasal Polyps - Johns Hopkins Medicine
Surgery: If the nasal polyp isn’t removed or shrunk by medication, then endoscopic surgery may be required to remove the polyps Your surgeon will remove the polyp, which is preventing the flow of sinus and nasal fluids from properly draining and ventilating your sinus and nasal passages
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