'Nose bleed'
Aetiology
Local causes
- Idiopathic
- Trauma
- Foreign bodies
- Inflammation
- Tumour
Systemic causes
- Drugs - e.g. Warfain, aspirin
- Clotting abnormalities
- Liver disease
- Haemophilia
- Leukaemia
- Thrombocytopaenia
- Arteriosclerosis
- Hereditary haemorrhagic telangectasia
- Systemic inflammatory conditions
- Wegner's granulomatosis
- Hypertension - causes prolonged bleeding but not primary cause of epistaxis
Pathophysiology
- The nose is a vascular organ secondary to heating/humidification requirements
- The nose gains a blood supply from a number of vessels, originating from both the internal and external carotid artery
- One of the commonest sites of bleeding is Little's area on the anterior septum, where a number of vessels anastamose (anterior ethmoid, posterior ethmoid, sphenopalatine, great palatine, superior labial)

Management
Stepwise approach:
- First aid measures - pinching the fleshy anterior part of the nose, leaning forward, spitting out into a bowl, ice pack compression
- On arrival to secondary care: resuscitation if necessary, arrest/slow flow (e.g. ice, topical vasoconstrictor), anterior rhinoscopy/nasal endoscopy to investigate source of bleeding
- Direct therapy - silver nitrate cautery if there is an identifiable anterior bleeding point
- Indirect therapy - this includes nasal packs (e.g. rapid rhino) or Foley catheters to compress difficult to identify bleeding points (likely posterior) or heavy bleeding points
- Surgery - sphenopalatine artery ligation (endoscopic)