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  • Everyone, everywhere occasionally sneezes. It’s something humansand even some animals

  • like cats, and dogs, and chickensjust do.

  • But why? Why do we sneeze?

  • If your answer is that it’s our nose’s way of getting rid of irritants and excess

  • mucus, youre right -- but only partly.

  • See, scientists have long thought that sneezing -- technically known as sternutation -- is

  • a reflex.

  • When irritantslike dust, dander, germs, or pollenget into your nose, your brain

  • sends out a signal to get rid of it. That same signal goes out if an excessive amount

  • of mucus is hanging out in there too -- say, if you have a cold.

  • This signal triggers a deep breath, which you hold in your lungs for a moment.

  • While youre holding your breath, your chest muscles clench and pressure builds. Your tongue

  • is forced to the roof of your mouth ... and you breathe out -- fast -- through your nose

  • in the form of a sneeze.

  • That’s the old, short, and still correct answer to the questionWhy do we sneeze?”

  • But according to a paper published in 2012 in the journal FASEB, there’s a little more

  • to it than that.

  • And it all has to do with cilia, the tiny, hairlike paddles that line our noses and sinuses.

  • In the study, a group of researchers from the University of Pennsylvania basically grew

  • a tiny nose.

  • They took cells from the nostrils of several healthy adults and grew them in an incubator

  • for a few weeks, until the cells formed the same type of lining that's in your sinus,

  • complete with cilia.

  • Then, to mimic a sneeze, the scientists puffed air on the lining.

  • They noticed that the burst of air triggered the ciliawhich look sort of like shaggy

  • dog hair under a microscopeto kick into high gear, moving back and forth repeatedly

  • for up to several minutes after the trick sneeze.

  • So, why were they so active for so long? Any potential irritants would have been cleared

  • out already.

  • Well, the triggered cilia were acting as a broom, basically resetting the entire nasal

  • environment, not just the parts where there’d been irritating gunk.

  • Just like computers do, biologists think that our nose needs a reboot every once in a while

  • and its kinda-furry restart button is made of all those cilia.

  • But it turns out that not everybody’s sneezes actually reboot their nose.

  • In addition to looking at healthy folkscells, this same group of scientists took

  • a peek at the cells of people suffering from sinusitis, which causes inflamed sinuses and

  • general nasal discomfortrunny nose, nasal congestion, all that fun stuff.

  • They discovered that when they puffed air onto the tissue of the sinusitis sufferers,

  • the cilia didn’t beat faster.

  • Meaning that chronic sinusitis might have to do with cilia that can’t properly reset

  • post-sneeze -- and that knowledge might help researchers developing treatments for it.

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Everyone, everywhere occasionally sneezes. It’s something humansand even some animals

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