Typically when all three emissions are high (HC, CO & NOx) we suspect the Catalytic Converter is defective; but only after the entire emission system is diagnosed. You have to be careful of technicians suggesting... "may it's the plugs, maybe it's the oxygen sensor". You'll end up spending a lot of money on unnecessary repairs.
We realize you mention CO is ok, however simply because CO has not failed or appears to be within range does not mean air/fuel ratio is correct. A slightly lean or rich fuel mixture (low CO or high CO respectively) will disrupt fuel combustion, resulting in high HC and even high NO.
We can only recommend you have a smog check repair station conduct a thorough diagnosis in order to find out the exact cause of your Nissan Maxima's high HC and NO faults.
We can mention this however.... usually high NOx is caused by a defective EGR valve/system. And high HC is caused by a defective ignition system (spark plugs, coils, plug wires if equipped).
Alec - SmogTips Support
posted by SmogTips Support