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Antibody deficiencies are more common in adult versus pediatric recurrent acute rhinosinusitis
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Antibody deficiencies are more common in adult versus pediatric recurrent acute rhinosinusitis

Chadi A. Makary, Phillip R. Purnell, O and Daniel C. O'Brien
American Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Medicine and Surgery, Vol.42(5)
2021

Abstract

Acute Disease Adolescent Adult Age Factors Aged Aged, 80 and over Child Female Humans Immunity, Humoral Immunoglobulins Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes Male Middle Aged Recurrence Retrospective Studies Rhinitis Sinusitis Young Adult antibiotic agent bacterium antibody immunoglobulin A immunoglobulin G immunoglobulin M Pneumococcus vaccine sodium chloride steroid immunoglobulin acute rhinosinusitis adult antibiotic prophylaxis antibody titer Article aspirin exacerbated respiratory disease blood cell count child ciliary dyskinesia clinical evaluation clinical feature comorbidity cystic fibrosis demography female human humoral immune deficiency immunoglobulin A deficiency immunoglobulin blood level immunoglobulin deficiency immunotherapy incidence major clinical study male medical record review morbidity nonhuman otorhinolaryngology pathophysiology patient referral pneumococcal infection priority journal recurrent disease retrospective study Streptococcus pneumoniae upper respiratory tract infection vaccination acute disease adolescent age aged blood complication humoral immunity immune deficiency immunology middle aged recurrent disease rhinitis sinusitis very elderly young adult

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