Why I did turbinate reduction surgery - Empty Nose Syndrome

5 months ago
13

My story and a few tips - check the comments section as well

NEVER PUSH on your nose with your hand ! It may cause blood vessels to rupture and the septum cartilage inside the nose will become swollen and will block breathing, it is a very bad condition and doctors cannot help. The nose is made of very strong bones only surgery can reposition these. Do not try anything by yourself, I repeat, you have no idea in what trouble you can throw yourself in ! Check for broken nose https://rumble.com/v6rwtcf-how-to-check-for-broken-nose-displaced-bones-accidentimpact-difficulty-brea.html

If you think you or someone you know may had just displaced/broken their nose, don't wait to visit a doctor or the Emergency Room - you have about 1 week to have a doctor place the bones back in place, after which the bones will weld in the wrong position and will require surgery to move them back.

Remember that almost all clinicians will not tell you your nose is broken: instead they will recommend to straighten the septum (septoplasty) which also involves turbinate reduction which can ruin your life and give you ENS Empty Nose syndrome. Be sure to watch my experience with ENS https://rumble.com/playlists/ICiDuxm-d-A Inform yourself, don't believe blindly the clinician.

A broken nose may also prevent the sinus cavities from draining properly on one side (drain holes are blocked by the displaced septum), which can cause continuous mucus secretion inside your nose, and also can cause the ear to keep popping on one side - because the ear also has a communication with inside the nose (eustachian tube) and this tube can get blocked by the mucus secretions from the sinuses
May also read on ENS forum https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/guestfr/general-discussion-f7/
Links between Sinusitis and Asthma
https://www.jaxallergy.com/sinusitis-and-asthma-connection/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2774711/
https://www.uptodate.com/contents/relationships-between-rhinosinusitis-and-asthma https://www.jacionline.org/article/0091-6749(92)90180-A/pdf

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