She touched her cheek, tender but healing. She had always dismissed sinus infections as mere annoyances, trivial inconveniences of the winter season. But standing there on solid ground, she realized the profound complexity of the human body—how a little bit of inflammation in the face could hijack the very way she perceived reality.
"Right here?" Dr. Aris pressed again on the maxillary sinuses, just below the cheekbones.
It is important to note that sinus dizziness usually feels different from anxiety dizziness or low blood sugar. Patients typically describe it as: