Sinus Blog
What Is a Deviated Nasal Septum — and Do I Have One?
A deviated nasal septum (DNS) is an abnormal deflection of the bone and cartilage that divides the inside of your nose into two chambers. It is more common than a
FESS vs. Balloon Sinuplasty: Which One Is Right for You?
The short answer: The decision between FESS and balloon sinuplasty depends on your history, CT findings, nasal endoscopy, prior treatments, and whether polyps, lesions, or resistant disease are present. For
What Is NEUROMARK® — And Could It Stop Your Chronic Runny Nose for Good?
The short answer: NEUROMARK® is a radiofrequency tool that treats the posterior nasal nerves — the overactive signaling pathway responsible for chronic runny nose, post-nasal drip, and excess drainage. It
Facial Self-Massage and Lymphatic Drainage — A Clinical Protocol for Airway Health
One of the most meaningful things I can give a patient is agency. Not just a prescription or a procedure, but a technique — something they can do themselves, at
Stress, the Autonomic Nervous System, and Airway Inflammation
One of the most underappreciated drivers of chronic airway inflammation is not an allergen, not a pathogen, and not an anatomical problem. It is stress. Not the dramatic, obvious stress
Why Nosebleeds Aren’t Random — The Hidden Sign of Airway Inflammation
Most patients think of a nosebleed as a random inconvenience — something that just happens and then stops. But when nosebleeds are recurrent, they are rarely random. They are a



