If you’ve ever suffered through a sinus infection, you’ve probably cursed your sinuses without really knowing just how important they are. If it weren’t for the air-filled sacs we call sinuses, it would be a lot harder to carry our heads around all day.
There are four pairs of sinuses (named for the skull bones in which they are located):
Like the nasal cavity, the sinuses are all lined with mucus. The mucus secretions produced in the sinuses are continually being swept into the nose by the hair-like structures on the surface of the respiratory membrane.
When they aren’t moistening the air we breathe through our noses, the hollow sinuses act to lighten the bones of the skull. Sinuses also serve as resonating chambers for speech.
The paired and often asymmetrical sinuses are small or rudimentary at birth but grow as the skull grows. They are fairly well developed by age 7 but don’t reach their maximum size until after puberty. In adults, the sinuses vary considerably in size and shape.
Sinuses are susceptible to infection. Sinusitis is inflammation of a sinus caused by a bacterial infection that can follow a viral infection. This causes pus and mucus to accumulate in the sinus. Symptoms can include fever, headache, stuffy nose, and impaired sense of smell.