Introduction & Anatomy - Nosebleed Nuances
- Epistaxis: Bleeding from the nose.
- Nasal Septum Vascular Supply:
- Little's Area (Kiesselbach's Plexus): Anterosuperior septum. Arteries: 📌 Superior labial, Anterior ethmoidal, Greater palatine, Sphenopalatine (SAGS).
- Woodruff's Plexus: Posteroinferior, primarily sphenopalatine artery.
- Lateral Wall Supply: Sphenopalatine, ant/post ethmoidals, facial & greater palatine artery branches.
⭐ Kiesselbach's plexus in Little's area is the most common site (~90%) for anterior epistaxis.
Etiology - The Bleed Breakdown
| Local Causes | Systemic Causes |
|---|---|
| * Trauma: nose picking, fractures, foreign bodies | * Hypertension (prolongs bleeding) |
| * Inflammatory: sinusitis, rhinitis, allergies, granulomatous diseases (TB, Wegener's) | * Bleeding disorders: hemophilia, vWD, ITP, leukemia |
| * Neoplastic: JNA, SCC, inverted papilloma | * Medications: aspirin, warfarin, clopidogrel, NSAIDs |
| * Structural: Septal deviation, perforation | * Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia (HHT) |
| * Iatrogenic: post-surgical, NG tube | * Others: liver disease, kidney disease, alcohol abuse, vitamin K deficiency |
| * Idiopathic |
Clinical Evaluation - Source Sleuthing
- History: Onset (spontaneous/traumatic), duration, frequency, severity, laterality, site clues (anterior/posterior), provoking factors. Medical Hx (HTN, coagulopathy), Drug Hx (anticoagulants, nasal sprays).
- Examination:
- Assess hemodynamic stability (pulse, BP).
- Anterior rhinoscopy: remove clots, identify bleeding point.
- Nasal endoscopy: if site unclear or posterior bleed suspected.
- Differentiating Anterior vs. Posterior Epistaxis:
- Investigations:
- CBC (assess blood loss).
- Coagulation profile (PT, aPTT, INR): if recurrent/severe/systemic cause suspected/on anticoagulants.
- CT/MRI: for suspected tumors/sinus pathology or refractory epistaxis.
⭐ Posterior epistaxis typically involves bleeding from branches of the sphenopalatine artery (Woodruff's plexus) and often presents with blood trickling down the pharynx.
Management - Flow Stoppers
-
Initial: ABCs. Trotter's method (pinch soft nose, lean forward, mouth breathe 10-20 mins). Ice pack (nasal bridge).

-
Medical/Cautery (if bleeding point visible):
- Topical vasoconstrictors: Oxymetazoline, Adrenaline 1:1000.
- Cauterization: Chemical ($AgNO_3$ - avoid bilateral septal), Electrocautery.
-
Nasal Packing (24-72 hrs):
- Anterior: Absorbable (Surgicel, Gelfoam); Non-absorbable (Merocel, BIPP - add prophylactic antibiotics).

- Posterior: Foley's catheter (10-14 Fr), Epistat/Brighton balloon.
- Anterior: Absorbable (Surgicel, Gelfoam); Non-absorbable (Merocel, BIPP - add prophylactic antibiotics).
-
Surgical/Interventional (refractory/severe posterior):
- ESPAL (Endoscopic Sphenopalatine Artery Ligation) - Treatment of Choice.
- A/P Ethmoidal Artery Ligation. Maxillary Artery Ligation.
- Arterial Embolization (Interventional Radiology).
⭐ ESPAL has >90% success for intractable posterior epistaxis, preferred over older methods.
Complications & Special Cases - Red Alert Risks
- Epistaxis Complications: Anemia, hypovolemic shock, aspiration, sinusitis.
- Management Complications:
- Nasal Packing: Pain, infection, sinusitis, Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS) (📌 Staph. aureus), septal perforation, alar necrosis.
- Cautery: Crusting, septal perforation, synechiae.
- Surgery/Embolization: Anesthesia risks, blindness, stroke.
- Special Cases:
- Children: Usually anterior; consider foreign body, JNA (adolescent males).
- Anticoagulated: ↑risk; manage anticoagulation.
- HHT: Recurrent; laser, septodermoplasty, Avastin.
⭐ Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS), with fever, rash, hypotension, is a rare but life-threatening risk of prolonged nasal packing.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Little's area (Kiesselbach's plexus) is the most common site for anterior epistaxis.
- Posterior epistaxis often arises from Woodruff's plexus (sphenopalatine artery branches), common in elderly/hypertensives.
- Initial management: ABCs, Trotter's method (direct pressure), anterior/posterior nasal packing, then cautery.
- Sphenopalatine Artery Ligation (SPAL) is a key surgical option for refractory posterior epistaxis.
- Suspect Juvenile Nasopharyngeal Angiofibroma (JNA) with recurrent, profuse epistaxis in adolescent males.
- Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia (HHT) presents with recurrent epistaxis and multiple telangiectasias.
- Uncontrolled hypertension is a major risk factor, especially for severe or posterior bleeds.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app