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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Natural Remedies / Natural and Effective Sinus Infection Remedy

Natural and Effective Sinus Infection Remedy

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Natural Sinus Infection Remedy+−
    • How to Use 
  • How to Use this Sinus Infection Remedy+−
    • What finally worked!
  • Natural Prevention of Sinus Problems+−
    • Dietary Recommendations
    • Lifestyle Recommendations
    • Supplement Recommendations
    • More Information

sinus infection remedy

If you’ve ever had a sinus infection, you know how miserable it can be. Sinus infections are a common problem, and they can become markedly worse during cold and flu season.  

Sinus congestion usually occurs as a result of a respiratory ailment such as a cold, cough, or allergic reaction. When you feel a sinus problem coming on, a highly effective sinus infection remedy you can use is probiotics – directly into the sinus passages.  The most effective way to deliver this is by putting it right into your porcelain neti pot. 

Can’t use a neti-pot or have a child that hasn’t been able to master the use of this type of apparatus? Then, I would suggest a nasal saline spray from the drug store and use that instead. My sons use one with great results when they are congested.

Here’s how the simple protocol works. You will be delighted how easy and effective this sinus infection remedy is. It may very well save you a trip to the doctor and a prescription for antibiotics.

Natural Sinus Infection Remedy

1. Empty the contents of a probiotic capsule into your neti pot (I like this one) or empty nasal spray bottle. Alternatively, a bulb syringe can be used, but the ingredients will have to be mixed separately and then sucked into the bulb once fully blended and ready to use.

2. Add warm filtered water.

3. Add a bit of sea salt and baking soda if desired – you won’t need very much (I always just guess – but no more than about 1/8 teaspoon)

4. Mix ingredients together carefully with a spoon or shake bottle after screwing on the lid (nasal spray bottle).

How to Use 

5. If using a neti-pot: while standing over a sink, insert the nozzle of the neti-pot into one nostril, and make sure there is a good seal between the nozzle and your nostril. Lean forward, close the back of your throat and breathe through your mouth. Then, allow the contents of the neti pot to enter one nasal opening and rinse through to exit out the other nasal opening. This may take up to two or three minutes if your nasal passages are congested. Repeat on the other side.

Try to avoid swallowing the water that goes into the nostrils, and blow your nose when finished. If using a spray bottle: insert the nozzle of the spray bottle into one nostril while covering the other. While compressing the pump on the nasal spray bottle, inhale deeply. Repeat several times on both sides. Be prepared to spit out anything left after inhaling the mist into the sink.

6. When finished, wash out your neti-pot or spray bottle with warm water and soap and allow it to dry before using it again.

7. Oral probiotics can be used not just like a natural sinus infection remedy. They can also be used to prevent sinus infections in the first place.

How to Use this Sinus Infection Remedy

A friend of mine had a sinus infection that had been going on for 5 – 6 weeks. She had tried everything that was natural – aromatherapy (breathing steam with essential oils), apple cider vinegar in water, grapefruit seed extract in water, colloidal silver nasal spray, taking the best probiotics orally, oil of oregano in water (which she had used in the past with great success for sinus problems), and various homeopathic and other natural preparations.

Nothing was doing the trick and she was getting desperate!

What finally worked!

As a final attempt to resolve the problem naturally before resorting to meds, she went to see a naturopath who did some head massage, chiropractic manipulations and used essential oil swabs up into her sinus passages.

While these did offer some improvement, she was concerned that the next day the infection would come roaring back again.

At the suggestion of her next-door neighbor who is a nutritional therapist, she tried adding probiotics to her neti-pot. The naturopath also suggested alternating hot and cold packs on the forehead to encourage sinus drainage.

Immediately after using the probiotics in my neti-pot, she felt a terrible burning sensation that went on for a good ten minutes.

It was quite painful, but as it subsided, she went to bed and had a good night’s sleep.  The next morning, she was surprised to find that she experienced no pain. This continued throughout the day.  The horrible “ice pick” sinus pressure which was normally in full-swing by 10 a.m. was completely gone.

She repeated the neti pot protocol a few more times over the next five days along with some grapefruit seed extract (about 5 drops in 6 ounces of water twice a day). The entrenched sinus infection resolved and did not return.

Natural Prevention of Sinus Problems

Sinus issues are often a symptom of something else going on, such as yeast overgrowth or a candida problem. Making changes to your diet can help to reduce the incidence and severity of sinus problems. The need for even a natural sinus infection remedy is reduced as well. Here are some recommendations to avoid the overgrowth of yeast in the body:

Dietary Recommendations

  • Avoid refined grains – these foods are common in our food supply and eaten frequently. They are high in carbohydrates and are converted to sugar in the body.
  • Avoid meat, poultry, eggs, and dairy products from commercially-raised animals fed grains, soy, and corn from factory-farmed environments. These animals and birds are given antibiotics, hormones, antibiotics, and are not allowed outside to wander, graze, and obtain fresh air and sunshine. Eating those kinds of meat, meat products, eggs, and dairy can contribute to yeast overgrowth in the body. Eat meats, dairy products, poultry, and eggs from animals raised naturally and without chemicals, hormones, or antibiotics.
  • Eliminate processed and refined foods from the diet including excessive sugar and refined carbohydrates.

Lifestyle Recommendations

  • Steer clear of prescription drug medications such as antibiotics, steroids, birth control pills, and even over-the-counter medications. These medications can greatly contribute to yeast overgrowth and unfriendly bacteria in the digestive tract. Once entrenched in the gut, these pathogens easily spread throughout the body.
  • Eat plenty of healthy fats in your diet – butter, olive oil, palm oil, avocado oil, coconut oil, pastured lard, and grass-fed tallow. These traditional, healthy fats are nutrient-dense and help your body keep away illness and disease.
  • Consume plenty of cultured and fermented foods and raw dairy products from healthy cows on pasture. These foods will naturally help promote diverse and friendly bacteria in your body and help keep illness and disease away.

Supplement Recommendations

  • Take a therapeutic-grade probiotic daily to ensure friendly bacteria support in your gut. Read this post about choosing probiotics for more information on good brands to buy.
  • If you still have trouble with yeast, consider doing regular detox baths or other protocols like a coffee enema. Better still, follow a temporary, healing dietary protocol like the GAPS diet, SCD, or autoimmune paleo (AIP).

More Information

How I Resolved My Raging Sinus Infection
How to Make and Use an Onion Poultice for Congestion
Doctor Prescribed Treatment for Healing Croup Naturally
SSKI:  The Best Cough Expectorant You’ve Never Tried
Power Shot: Best Green Juice for Congestion

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Category: Natural Remedies, Oral Health
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (111)

  1. virginia

    Feb 20, 2013 at 10:16 pm

    Can you use Acidolphilus for this procedure?

    Reply
  2. Luna

    Feb 12, 2013 at 1:42 pm

    I recently heard a news story involving a woman who died because she used tap water in her neti pot. The tap water contained a kind of “brain eating amoeba”. Perfectly safe to drink. But not safe for intra-nasal usage. You can see the news story if you google. I want to mention this because sounds like people are getting very creative with the ingredients they’re putting into their neti pots. Are those ingredients tested to be sanitized for this type of usage? My guess is that they’re only sanitized for consumption. Personally, I wouldn’t risk it. Just stick with what it says on the instructions.

    Reply
  3. chanda

    Feb 11, 2013 at 8:57 pm

    @Lisa….I’ve never had that happen, but I’m guessing you might be experiencing some die-off. My best guess would be that your body is killing off the bad bacteria and this is how your body is reacting. I know some people experience flu-like symptoms, but I haven’t heard about the head cold stuff. Maybe you could start with a half of a capsule (in water or food), take it for a few days that way, then gradually build yourself up to the recommended dose, which is usually 2 capsules per day (check your bottle). If you still have a strange reaction at 1/2 a pill, maybe even go down to a quarter of a pill??? I’m sure someone with more information will be more helpful. Good luck to you!

    Reply
  4. Lisa

    Feb 11, 2013 at 1:12 pm

    Has anyone ever had this happen to them? I started taking probiotics, the normal way by swallowing a pill, and within a couple days I developed what seemed like a bad head cold. Very runny nose, sore throat from the nasal drip, a tired feeling. At first I just figured I had gotten a cold, which I never get by the way. But then I didn’t take the probiotics for 2 days and I felt better. The cold subsided. Then I started taking them again and boom, the head cold came back! Yesterday I was losing my voice from the nasal drip. Is this from the detoxing affect.

    Reply
  5. Nancy

    Dec 15, 2012 at 1:35 am

    Wondering if anybody has tried whey (like from home made 24 hour cultured yogurt) in the neti pot?

    Reply
  6. chanda

    Oct 8, 2012 at 5:20 pm

    Hi there. Me again. Thought I would let you know that I tried the probiotic in the nostrils and back of throat of my son again, this time using more. I don’t know if it’s coincidence, but this morning, his fever is gone, he’s feeling better, even went to school and had a great day! I will definitely remember this next time at the first sign of illness!

    Reply
  7. Chanda

    Oct 7, 2012 at 4:03 pm

    Hi Sarah! Thank you so much for your blog! I’ve just begun my whole food/natural journey over the last year and I can’t tell you how helpful your site has been! I have been using (Vitacost Brand) Probiotics now for about 6 months, but my son doesn’t take any (yet). I have used your above treatment to stave off a sinus infection for myself, but now I have a question about my child and his on-coming cold. I know there is no way I’ll be able to get my son (age 7 1/2) to tolerate the use of a neti-pot. He even has trouble with the saline gel that I have him use occasionally. Last night, at the first sign of his cold/sinus issue, I put about 1T of water in a bowl and emptied a probiotic capsule into it. I used a q-tip to mix it around. I then twirled the q-tip around near the edge of the bowl to remove as much as I could (mostly because I was afraid it would be too much for him). I took the q-tip and swirled it around each of his nostrils, only going 1/2″ in or so. I then dipped the q-tip in the probiotic again and had him open his mouth. I swiped the q-tip as far back on his tongue as I could reach. He did say he felt a little better this morning. However, this afternoon, he is going downhill. He has a slight fever which I can tell will climb. (I won’t treat it until it gets quite a bit higher because he’s not uncomfortable) I guess I’m worried about hurting him as I cannot seem to find an RDA for probiotics for kids (not that I’d trust the recommendation anyway necessarily). The one and only RDA I could find said not to give more than 3 Billion CFU to a child. Can you please help me determine whether or not I can use more tonight and maybe not be so sparing with it? Or even if I can give him a full pill??? Since I don’t use BioKult like you, I’ll list the ingredients here:
    Probiotic 10-20
    10 Strains/20 Billion
    Micoorganisms per serving
    Serving Size: 2 capsules
    L Acidophilus
    L Plantarum
    L Rhamnosus
    L Casei
    L Salivarius
    S Thermophilus
    B Bifidum
    B Longum
    L Helveticus
    L Brevis
    FOS 200mg NutraFlora

    Thanks so much for your help! I truly appreciate the time and effort you put into your blog. Have a happy day!

    Reply
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