Rhinitis in children is an inflammation of the mucous membrane and submucous tissues of the nasal cavity. In addition to nasal congestion and excessive pus, it may be accompanied by fever and cough, depression and irritability, as well as otitis media, rhinorrhea and joint pain, and in older children, headache. So, what are the classifications of rhinitis in children? The following experts will introduce the classification of rhinitis in children.
The common symptom of maxillary sinusitis in children is a chronic, mild cough with a “utter, utter” sound, accompanied by coughing up phlegm. This is not actually phlegm secreted by the trachea, but rather snot from pediatric rhinitis flowing downward into the throat and trachea and bronchi, which then causes a reflexive cough to cough up the snot. This kind of backflowing nasal mucus stimulates the upper respiratory tract for a long time, which can cause chronic inflammation secondary to bronchitis or spasm and promote coughing and wheezing; in turn, it affects the vascular changes in the nasal mucosa, causing nasal congestion and heavy voice, swelling and pain in the throat, and aggravates the inflammation of the sinuses. Medically known as nasopulmonary reflex syndrome.
2, children’s sinusitis The signs and symptoms of sinusitis in children are similar to those of the common cold, and there are difficulties in diagnosis.
3, eosinophilic rhinitis The disease is a hyperreactive rhinopathy characterized by increased eosinophilia of nasal secretions and disorders of the complement binding system. It is a congenital disease, mostly starting from the first year of childhood, and most children develop until adolescence when the symptoms can completely disappear.