Paranasal sinuses form developmentally through excavation of bone by air-filled sacs (
pneumatic diverticula) from the
nasal cavity. This process begins prenatally (intrauterine), and it continues through the course of an organism's lifetime. The results of experimental studies suggest that the natural ventilation rate of a sinus with a single
sinus ostium (opening) is extremely slow. Such limited ventilation may be protective for the sinus, as it would help prevent drying of its mucosal surface and maintain a near-sterile environment with high
carbon dioxide concentrations and minimal
pathogen access. Thus composition of gas content in the maxillary sinus is similar to
venous blood, with high carbon dioxide and lower
oxygen levels compared to breathing air. At birth, only the
maxillary sinus and the
ethmoid sinus are developed but not yet pneumatized; only by the age of seven are they fully aerated. The
sphenoid sinus appears at the age of three, and the
frontal sinuses first appear at the age of six, and fully develop during adulthood.
CT scans, radiographs (X-rays) and other illustrations File:CT Paranasal Sinuses Coronal MPR Soft Tissue Window.ogg|
Coronal CT scan of the paranasal sinuses (soft tissue) File:CT Paranasal Sinuses Coronal MPR Bone Window.ogg|Coronal CT scan of the paranasal sinuses (bone) File:Paranasal sinuses radiograph occipitofrontal.jpg|Paranasal sinuses radiograph (occipitofrontal) File:Paranasal sinuses radiograph occipitomental.jpg|Paranasal sinuses radiograph (occipitomental) File:Paranasal sinuses radiograph lateral.jpg|Paranasal sinuses radiograph (lateral) File:3DPX-002305 Upper respiratory cast 3DFile Nevit Dilmen.stl|3D cast of maxillary, frontal, ethmoid and sphenoid sinuses, nasal cavity and hypopharynx ==Clinical significance==