“…3 This can lead to a misdiagnosis of pathologies such as nasolabial tumors with calcium density: osteoma, odontoma, ossifying fibroma, osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, calcified angiofibroma, calcified polyp, bone osteitis and fungal balls. [1][2][3]5,6 Rhinoliths can be possibly associated with several other nasal pathologies such as a vestibular or turbinoseptal anomaly, a massive granulomatous reaction comprising the rhinolith, sometimes a sinusitis, a polyp, a benign tumor, a hypertrophic rhinitis, or a mycosis that can justify extraction by external surgical approach. 3 For our patient, CT and macroscopy indicated a rhinolithiasis rather than a fungal ball; the mycosis was only an associated colonization.…”