Epistaxis 2002 04 Slides
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Transcript of Epistaxis 2002 04 Slides
Introduction and History5-10% of the population experience an episode of epistaxis each year. 10% of those will see a physician. 1% of those seeking medical care will need a specialist.Mythology: brown paper, nails, scissors, scarlet threads,“lead that has never touched the ground”A condition with a long history—Hippocrates to Henry Goodyear.
Why bleeding from the nose ?Vascular organ secondary to incredible heating/humidification requirementsVasculature runs just under mucosa (not squamous)Arterial to venous anastamosesICA and ECA blood flow
External Carotid Artery
-Sphenopalatine artery
-Greater palatine artery
-Ascending pharyngeal artery
-Posterior nasal artery
-Superior Labial artery
Internal Carotid Artery
-Anterior Ethmoid artery
-Posterior Ethmoid artery
Kesselbach’s Plexus/Little’s Area:-Anterior Ethmoid (Opth)
-Superior Labial A (Facial)
-Sphenopalatine A (IMAX)
-Greater Palatine (IMAX)
Woodruff’s Plexus:-Pharyngeal & Post. Nasal AA of Sphenopalatine A (IMAX)
Anterior vs. PosteriorMaxillary sinus ostiumAnterior: younger, usually septal vs. anterior ethmoid, most common (>90%), typically less severePosterior: older population, usually from Woodruff’s plexus, more serious.
EtiologyLocal factors
VascularInfectious/InflammatoryTrauma (most common)IatrogenicNeoplasmDessicationForeign Bodies/other
Local Factors - TraumaNose pickingNose blowing/sneezingNasal fractureNasogastric/nasotracheal intubationTrauma to sinuses, orbits, middle ear, base of skullBarotrauma
Local Factors - Iatrogenic nasal injury
Functional endoscopic sinus surgeryRhinoplastyNasal reconstruction
Local Factors - NeoplasmJuvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibromaInverted papillomaSCCAAdenocarcinomaMelanomaEsthesioneuroblastomaLymphoma
Local Factors –Dessication
Cold, dry air—more common in wintertimeDry heat—Phoenix and Death valleyNasal oxygenAnatomic abnormalitiesAtrophic rhinitis
Local Factors - Other
Self-inflicted (pedi) vs. traumatic foreign bodiesIntranasal parasitesSeptal perforationChemical (cocaine, nasal sprays, ammonia, etc.)
Systemic Factors -- Vascular
Hypertension/ArteriosclerosisHereditary Hemorrhagic Telangectasias (OWR)
Systemic Factors –Infection/Inflammation
TuberculosisSyphillisWegener’s GranulomatosisPeriarteritis nodosaSLE
Systemic Factors – CoagulopathiesThrombocytopeniaPlatelet dysfunction
Systemic disease (Uremia)drug-induced (Coumadin/NSAIDs/Herbal supplements)
Clotting Factor DeficienciesHemophiliaVonWillebrand’s diseaseHepatic failure
Hematologic malignancies
Etiology and AgeChildren—foreign body, nose picking, nasal diptheria (1/3 with chronic bleeds have coagulation d/o)Adults—trauma, idiopathicMiddle age—tumorsOld age--hypertension
Initial ManagementABC’sMedical history/MedicationsVital signs—need IV?Physical exam
Anterior rhinoscopyEndoscopic rhinoscopy
Laboratory examRadiologic studies
gelfoambacitracin
endoscopes
suction bovie/bipolar
Afrin
T.C.A.
epistat
vaseline gauzebayonet forcepts
suction
good lightanesthetic
silver nitrate
merocelssurgicel
Non-surgical treatments Control of hypertension Correction of coagulopathies/thrombocytopenia
FFP or whole blood/reversal of anticoagulant/plateletsPressure/Expulsion of clotsTopical decongestants/vasocontrictorsCautery (AgNo3 vs. TCA vs. Bipolar vs. Bovie)Nasal packing (effective 80-90% of time)Greater palatine foramen block
Non-surgical treatments – on d/cHumidity/emolientsDiscontinue offending medsNasal saline spraysAvoidance of nose picking/blowingSneeze with mouth openAvoid straining/bedrest
Nasal packsAnterior nasal packs
TraditionalRecent modifications
Posterior nasal packsTraditional Recent modifications
Ant/Post nasal packing
Posterior Packs – Admission Elderly and those with other chronic diseases may need to be admitted to the ICUContinuous cardiopulmonary monitoringAntibioticsOxygen supplementation may be neededMild sedation/analgesiaIVF
Indications for surgery/embolizationContinued bleeding despite nasal packingPt requires transfusion/admit hct of <38% (barlow)Nasal anomaly precluding packingPatient refusal/intolerance of packingPosterior bleed vs. failed medical mgmt after >72hrs (wang vs. schaitkin)
Selective Angiography/embolizationHelps identify location of bleedingEmbolization most effective in patients who
Still bleeding after surgical arterial ligationBleeding site difficult to reach surgicallyComorbidities prohibit general anesthetic
Effective only when bleeding is >.5 ml/min90+% success rate, complication rate of 0.1%Only able to embolize external carotid & branchesComplications: minor (18-45%)/major (0-2%)Contraindicated in bad atherosclerosis, Ethmoid bleed
Surgical treatment
Transmaxillary IMA ligationIntraoral IMA ligationAnterior/Posterior Ethmoidal ligationTransnasal Sphenopalatine ligationExternal carotid artery ligation
Septodermoplasty/Laser ablation
Transmaxillary IMA ligationWaters view Caldwell-LucElectrocautery of posterior wall before removalMicroscopic dissection and ligation of IMA --descending palatine & sphenopalantine most importantRecurrence rate (failure rate) of 10-15%Complication rate of 25-30% (oa fistula,dental, n)
Intraoral IMA ligationPosterior gingivobuccal incision beginning at second molarTemporalis mm split and partially dissectedIMAX visualized, clipped and dividedAdvantages: children/facial fracturesDisadvantages: more proximal ligationComplications: trismus, damage to infraorbital n
Ant./Post. Ethmoidal ligationPatients s/p IMAX ligation still bleeding, superior nasal cavity epistaxis, or in conjunction when source unclearLynch incisionFronto-ethmoidsuture line12-24-6 (14-18, 8-10, 4-6)
Transnasal Endoscopic Sphenopalatine Artery ligation
Follow Middle Turbinate to posteriormost aspectVertical mucoperiosteal incision 7-8mm anterior to post middle turb (between mid. and inf. turbs)Elevation of flap—ID neurovascular bundle at foramenLigation with titanium clipReapproximate flapComplications –few, Failures—0-13%
ECA ligationEffectivenessAnterior border of SCMID ECA/ICALigation after clear that surrounding structures are safe.
Septodermoplasty/LaserRemove mucosa from anterior ½ septum, floor of nose, lateral wallSTSG vs. cutaneous, myocutaneous, microvascular free flaps vs. AutograftsNeodymium-yttrium-garnet (Nd-YAG) laser or Argon laser + topical steroid best nonsurg rx for mild/mod diseaseStill bleed, but not as badDefinitive treatment (severe disease)—closure of nose
Statistically speaking,….Some authors (Wang and Vogel) showed surgical intervention to have lower failure rates (14.3 vs. 26.2), decreased complications (40 vs. 68), and shorter hospital stays (2.2 less) than those w/posterior packs.Others compared all medical treatment to surgery and showed cost cut using medical management.Complication rates: posterior packs-25-40%, embolization 27%, IMAX ligation 28%Cost analysis: IMAX vs. Embolization vs. Surgical Cautery—about equalFailure rates: PP-30%, Sx-17%, Emb-4%
Tips and PearlsRed rubber on suction in contralateral nasal cavity AgNO3 x 30seconds or more (not on both sides of septum)Antihistamines to prevent rebleedsCautery does not work with no platelets/clottingGlove packingH2O2Merocels (2 or more) injected with cortisporin oticAmicar spray
Tips and PearlsHot water irrigationCold water irrigationSalt PorkDon’t pack nose in unconscious person with suspected skull fractures.Antibiotic cream vs. silver nitrateIntranasal pressureEstrogen cream to nasal septum
Tips and PearlsTransnasal endoscopic bipolar cautery of sphenopalatine artery (7% failure in pts with obvious source of bleed)Submucosal supraperichondrial dissection of nasal septumNot all hospitals have embolization-trained interventionalistsNo hard-set outline. Do what is best for your particular patient
CASE REPORT45 yo Vietnamese fisherman--stable, but uncomfortableProfuse nasal bleeding since 0200 this a.m.History: No known medical problems. Drinks 6-12 beers/day. Takes no medications. No history of easy bleeding. No family history.Physical exam: Profuse bleeding from both nostrils L>R and bleeding down the back of his throat—coughing up clots. Unable to locate precise location of bleed—appears to be posterior/superior.