And Vertigo - Sinusitis

One morning, I sat up in bed and the room kept moving . Not dizzy like spinning in circles for fun—dizzy like someone yanked the world sideways without my permission. I legit thought I had an inner ear tumor or early onset vertigo disorder. Google was not my friend.

Turns out, chronic sinusitis can cause vertigo. Who knew? Your sinuses and ears share plumbing (the Eustachian tubes). When your sinuses get inflamed and clogged, that pressure messes with your middle ear’s pressure balance. The result? Your brain gets mixed signals about where your body is in space. Queue the funhouse effect.

So if you’re dizzy and stuffed up, don’t just blame anxiety or dehydration. Sinusitis can absolutely wreck your balance. And yes, it’s weird that your nose and your sense of gravity are best friends. sinusitis and vertigo

My head became a faulty spinning carnival ride (thanks, sinuses) Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5 – informative, but I’d rather not relive it)

For two weeks, I felt like I was navigating life on a rocking boat with a head cold. Standing still felt like leaning. Bending over was a gamble. And forget looking up at shelves—instant tilt-a-whirl. One morning, I sat up in bed and the room kept moving

Here’s an interesting, engaging review on the connection between sinusitis and vertigo—written as if by a patient who’s been through it:

The good news: treat the sinusitis, and the vertigo usually follows. Decongestants, saline rinses, steam, and a course of antibiotics (for the infection) slowly brought me back to solid ground. Bonus: my ENT taught me the Epley maneuver, which actually helped reposition any crystal debris in my ears that got angry from the pressure changes. Google was not my friend

I always thought sinusitis was just a stuffy nose and face pressure. You know, the usual: green tissues, forehead throbbing, mouth-breathing like a sleepy bulldog. But then my sinuses decided to level up.