HEAD, EYE, EAR, NOSE, AND THROAT
EMERGENCIES
TREATMENT
■ Direct pressure
■ Expel clots (spit and blow).
■ Soaked pledgets (lidocaine plus oxymetolazine, neosynephrine, or
cocaine)
■ Cauterize with silver nitrate 5–7 seconds max, then apply surgicel or baci-
tracin ointment. Avoid cauterizing both sides of the nasal septum.
■ Oral antibiotics if packing placed
■ Anterior packing with <10-cm tampon; remove in 2 days
COMPLICATIONS
Sinusitis, toxic shock syndrome, septal necrosis, rebleed
Posterior Epistaxis
SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Fivetotenpercent of all nosebleeds
■ More common in older patients
■ Common causes: Atherosclerosis, coagulopathy, HTN
■ Source is from Woodruff plexus: Anastomosis of posterior nasal, posterior
ethmoid, sphenopalatine, and ascending pharyngeal arteries over the pos-
terior middle turbinate
■ Bilateral nasal bleeding, blood in the back of the throat, inability to visualize
source or stop bleeding with anterior pack suggests posterior source
TREATMENT
■ First try anterior epistaxis techniques.
■ Pack with posterior nasal gauze pack or 10-cm balloon tampon.
For traumatic nasal bleeding
that is continuous, consider
basilar skull fracture.
FIGURE 14.6. Arteries that contribute to anterior and posterior epistaxis.
(Reproduced, with permission, from Tintinalli JE, Kelen GD, Stapczynski SJ. Emergency
Medicine: A Comprehensive Study Guide, 6th ed.New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004:1477.)
Posterior
ethmoid
artery
Sphenopalatine
artery
Anterior
ethmoid
artery
Little area
(Kiesselbach
plexus)
Superior
labial artery
Greater
palatine artery
Four arteries of
Kiesselbach
PLExuS:
GreaterPalatine
SuperiorLabial
AnteriorEthmoid
Sphenopalatine
Most common site of bleeding
from the posteriorregion is
the posterior lateral branch of
thesphenopalatine artery.