Avitsenna Med Servis ENT Department provides diagnosis and treatment of rhinitis, sinusitis, tonsillitis, otitis, hearing loss, and nasal polyps with advanced endoscopic and laser technologies.
Avitsenna Med Servis ENT Department provides diagnosis and treatment of rhinitis, sinusitis, tonsillitis, otitis, hearing loss, and nasal polyps with advanced endoscopic and laser technologies.

ENT doctor Kokand, Sinusitis treatment, Tonsillitis therapy, Otitis treatment Kokand, Endoscopic ENT surgery Avitsenna.

Pneumonia is an inflammation of lung tissue caused by bacteria, viruses, or fungi. It often presents with cough, high fever, and difficulty breathing. Quick diagnosis and proper treatment are key to recovery.
Rhinitis is the inflammation of the nasal mucosa, often caused by viral infections, allergies, or bacteria. It results in nasal congestion, sneezing, runny nose, and reduced sense of smell.
Sinusitis is the inflammation of the sinuses around the nose, often following a cold, flu, or allergy. It causes facial pressure, nasal congestion, headache, and thick nasal discharge.
Tonsillitis is the inflammation of the tonsils, usually caused by viral or bacterial infections, particularly streptococcus. It causes sore throat, fever, painful swallowing, and fatigue.
Middle ear infection is inflammation of the space behind the eardrum. It is very common especially in children. It causes severe ear pain, fever, hearing loss and sometimes discharge from the ear.
Adenoid hypertrophy is the enlargement of lymphoid tissue (adenoids) at the back of the nose. It is most common in children aged 3-10 years. It causes nasal congestion, mouth breathing, snoring, frequent colds and hearing problems.
Pharyngitis is inflammation of the back wall of the throat and soft palate. It causes sore throat, difficulty swallowing, dry cough and sometimes fever. It most often appears due to viral cold or flu.
Laryngitis is inflammation of the voice box (larynx). It causes hoarseness, complete voice loss, dry cough and throat irritation. It most often occurs due to cold, virus or overuse of voice (teachers, singers).
