Booboos
Well-Known Member
This is a bit of a long shot, but you never know!
Jakey has had a nasal discharge, sneezing and wet, chokey-type cough for about 10 months now (often he has a little bit of eye discharge as well from the repeated sneezing/coughing). He has been referred to Leahurst.
He has had extensive tests (CT, rhinoplasty, bloods, x-rays) and it is NOT any of the following things:
- infection
- foreign object
- fungal infection
- tumour or growth
- abnormality in the underlying structures of the nose
He does not seem to be in any pain anywhere on his face.
The problem has NOT responded to a variety of antibiotics, some tried over a period of many weeks. He had an allergy test, the only thing he is allergic to is related to damp, but there is no damp in his environment so we think this was a false positive.
Initially he did respond to oral steroids, getting about 50% better in terms of the discharge, then he reached a plateau so we switched to an inhaler. He was almost fine on the inhaler but when we started reducing the dose, the discharge returned.
This time it did not clear up with the inhaler, then did not respond to oral steroids and now does not appear to even respond to a really high dose of oral steroids, so he is currently on a very high dose of steroids and the discharge is as bad as it has ever been.
It's all getting a bit desperate now! Can anyone think of anything that might help?
Jakey has had a nasal discharge, sneezing and wet, chokey-type cough for about 10 months now (often he has a little bit of eye discharge as well from the repeated sneezing/coughing). He has been referred to Leahurst.
He has had extensive tests (CT, rhinoplasty, bloods, x-rays) and it is NOT any of the following things:
- infection
- foreign object
- fungal infection
- tumour or growth
- abnormality in the underlying structures of the nose
He does not seem to be in any pain anywhere on his face.
The problem has NOT responded to a variety of antibiotics, some tried over a period of many weeks. He had an allergy test, the only thing he is allergic to is related to damp, but there is no damp in his environment so we think this was a false positive.
Initially he did respond to oral steroids, getting about 50% better in terms of the discharge, then he reached a plateau so we switched to an inhaler. He was almost fine on the inhaler but when we started reducing the dose, the discharge returned.
This time it did not clear up with the inhaler, then did not respond to oral steroids and now does not appear to even respond to a really high dose of oral steroids, so he is currently on a very high dose of steroids and the discharge is as bad as it has ever been.
It's all getting a bit desperate now! Can anyone think of anything that might help?