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Monday, October 7, 2024

Sinus problems can slow down anyone, including Olympic athletes

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Olympic Skeleton gold medalist Lizzy Yarnold | Wikimedia Commons

Olympic Skeleton gold medalist Lizzy Yarnold | Wikimedia Commons

When Lizzy Yarnold set out to win Olympic gold in 2018 in the sliding sport of skeleton, she never imagined such a common problem would stand in her way. Her issues were caused by a vestibular disorder affecting the inner ear, the Sun reported.

She also revealed having trouble breathing in a new much colder climate during the events and experiencing vertigo and sinus headaches without congestion, the Sun article said.

Yarnold, who began competing professionally in 2010, had previously won gold in the Olympics 2014. She is the most successful skeleton athlete of any nation. Shortly after arriving at the Olympics in 2018, she developed a chest infection, which intensified to the point that she was having trouble speaking and breathing, according to Wikipedia.    

Vestibular disorders affecting the inner ear are sometimes referred to as Labrynthitis. Labrynthitis is caused by inflammation of part of the inner ear known as the labyrinth. The inflammation comes from an infection, usually bacterial or in some cases viral, according to NHS Inform.

"The whole areas of respiratory tract -- so the nose, the ears --  it's all one respiratory tract going down into the lungs," said Dr. Daniel Mongiardo of the Dr. Daniel Mongiardo Sleep & Sinus Center.

Yarnold tried many home remedies for sinus headaches in an attempt to dull the symptoms of her condition, Wikipedia said. After falling to third she was able to tame her symptoms enough to take home the winning gold medal in 2018.     

Most bacterial infections clear up within 10 days and are typically caused by a common cold, according to the Mayo Clinic. You should see a sinus inflammation specialist when things do not clear up after that long, things get worse or you have a history of recurrent or chronic sinusitis and inflammation of sinus.

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