[Your Name/Institution] Journal: Journal of Otolaryngology and Vestibular Disorders (Hypothetical) Date: April 14, 2026 Abstract Background: Dizziness is a common but multifactorial complaint in primary care. While sinusitis is frequently cited by patients as a cause of their dizziness, the pathophysiological link remains controversial. Objective: To critically evaluate the evidence for and against a causal relationship between sinusitis and dizziness. Methods: A narrative review of otolaryngology, neurology, and vestibular literature was conducted, focusing on mechanisms including eustachian tube dysfunction, perilymphatic fistulas, and autonomic reflexes. Results: Sinusitis does not directly cause true vertigo (spinning sensation) in most cases. However, it can induce dizziness through three primary mechanisms: 1) Eustachian tube obstruction leading to middle ear pressure changes and mild disequilibrium; 2) Mucosal inflammation extending to the vestibular apparatus via the round window (rare); and 3) Sinusitis-associated dizziness —a sensation of lightheadedness or floating driven by inflammation-mediated autonomic dysregulation or fatigue. Conclusion: Sinusitis is an indirect, not direct, cause of dizziness. The sensation is typically non-vertiginous and resolves with treatment of the underlying sinus inflammation. Clinicians should avoid attributing true rotatory vertigo to sinusitis without ruling out central or peripheral vestibular disorders.
The Rhinogenic Vertigo Hypothesis: Investigating the Causal Link Between Sinusitis and Dizziness does sinusitis cause dizziness
This paper dissects the possible mechanisms, reviews the clinical evidence, and provides practical diagnostic criteria. For sinusitis to cause dizziness, a logical anatomical or physiological pathway must exist. 2.1 Eustachian Tube Dysfunction (ETD) – The Most Likely Mechanism The eustachian tube connects the nasopharynx (directly inflamed in sinusitis with post-nasal drip) to the middle ear. Inflammation and mucus can obstruct the tube, causing negative middle ear pressure. This pressure change alters the transmission of sound and pressure waves to the oval and round windows, creating a sensation of aural fullness, muffled hearing, and non-spinning dizziness (often described as “lightheadedness” or “swimming sensation”). This is imbalance , not true vertigo. 2.2 Extension of Inflammation to the Inner Ear (Rare) Theoretically, inflammatory cytokines from sinusitis could enter the inner ear via the round window membrane or through a congenital perilymphatic fistula. Animal models show that intranasal inflammation can raise inner ear fluid pressures. However, in humans, this is exceptionally rare and typically occurs only in severe, erosive fungal sinusitis. 2.3 Sinusitis-Associated Dizziness (Systemic Effect) Chronic inflammation releases interleukins (IL-1, IL-6) and TNF-α, which can induce sickness behavior —a syndrome including fatigue, malaise, and psychogenic dizziness. Additionally, sinus pressure can trigger trigeminal nerve activation, leading to autonomic reflexes (e.g., vasovagal lightheadedness). This is best termed “sinusitis-associated dizziness” rather than vertigo. 2.4 The Overlap with Vestibular Migraine A critical confounder: patients with sinusitis often have a history of migraine. Migraineurs frequently report “sinus pressure” and dizziness without true sinus pathology. Studies show that over 80% of patients with “sinus headache” actually have migraine (Schreiber et al., 2004). Thus, dizziness in a sinusitis patient may be coincidental migraine. 3. Clinical Evidence | Study | Design | Key Finding | |-------|--------|--------------| | Krouse et al. (2008) | Cross-sectional (n=300 CRS) | 28% reported dizziness; but on exam, 80% of those had abnormal tympanometry (ETD) | | Takeda et al. (2014) | Prospective cohort | Treating sinusitis with antibiotics/steroids reduced dizziness scores by 70% in patients with ETD, but had no effect on true rotatory vertigo | | Lal et al. (2016) | Systematic review | No high-quality evidence that sinusitis causes peripheral vertigo (nystagmus or canal paresis). | Conclusion: Sinusitis is an indirect, not direct, cause
Sinusitis, dizziness, vertigo, eustachian tube, vestibular system, rhinosinusitis 1. Introduction Dizziness accounts for approximately 5-10% of primary care visits. Among patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS), up to 30% report some form of dizziness or imbalance (Lal et al., 2016). This association has led to the clinical concept of “rhinogenic vertigo” —a term that is widely used but poorly defined. The core clinical question is: does sinusitis genuinely cause dizziness, or is this a coincidental comorbidity with conditions like benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) or migraine? but on exam