Nose bleeds (epistaxis)
- Usually from septum (central divider) close to tip of nose
- Can be from back of nose, usually in older people — may be more severe, harder to control
Check
- Airway — look in back of mouth for blood clot, clear if need be
- Calculate age-appropriate REWS
- Adult — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
- Child (less than 13 years) — AVPU, respiratory distress, RR, O2 sats, pulse, central capillary refill time, Temp
- Weight, BGL
- If person taking warfarin — check POC Test — INR
- If person having frequent, recurrent or heavy nosebleeds — check POC Test — Hb
Do
Nose bleed leading to shock
- Sit person up — leaning forward, ask person to spit out any clot in mouth
- Put in IV cannula, largest as possible — medical consult
- Run normal saline 10–20mL/kg — see Injuries — bleeding
- Reassess for more fluids
- Ask person to gently blow their nose to remove any clots
- Give tranexamic acid 500mg (5mL) via nasal atomiser to affected nostril prior to insertion of packing
- Pinch fleshy lower part of nose (just below upper bony part) closing the nostrils together — must be uncomfortably tight to work properly. Person can often do this themself — Figure 2.24
- Hold for 15 minutes by the clock — if pressure released at any time — counting must restart
- Check for ongoing bleeding. Repeat pinching if needed and check that pinch technique is good
- Ask person to gently spit out any blood that trickles down back of throat
- When bleeding stops tell person not to sniff or blow nose for rest of day
Figure 2.24
If bleeding continues after more than 30 minutes of pinching
- Medical consult
- Ask person to gently blow their nose to remove any clots
- Apply pressure from inside by putting folded swab or ribbon gauze soaked in lidocaine (lignocaine) 1% + adrenaline (epinephrine) 1:100,000 in nostril/s
- Hold for 10 minutes THEN remove packs and quickly look for bleeding site — need good light and good head position
- If bleeding site can be seen — can ‘burn’ with silver nitrate stick. Safe if
- Done on medical advice and confident about doing procedure
- Only 1 side of septum is done
- AND no known or suspected bleeding disorder
If bleeding still continues
- Put in anterior nasal pack. If person anxious — consider giving antiemetic and sedation first
- Merocel OR RapidRhino prepared nasal packing
- OR use gauze nasal packing if above not available
- After packing, check in throat for blood still trickling down from nose
- Medical consult to send to hospital
- Not urgent if bleeding stopped and/or haemodynamically stable
- If the pack is going to be in for a long time (transfer delayed over 12 hours) — Give amoxicillin oral — adult 500mg, child 15mg/kg/dose up to 500mg — doses — 3 times a day (tds)
- If allergy to penicillin — medical consult
If bleeding still continues despite anterior packing
- Urgent medical consult — see Early recognition of sepsis
- Anterior pack may be misplaced — check placement repack
- Bleeding may be from back of nose — put in posterior packing
- Posterior RapidRhino preferred if available
- Balloon catheter +/- anterior gauze packing if RapidRhino not available
- Medical consult — consider packing other nostril, deflate initial packing prior to insertion, inflate both packs simultaneously
Further management
- If bleeding site burnt — tell person to put oily cream (eg antiseptic cream, Vaseline) in nostril 2–3 times a day and gently rub outside of nose to spread it around to stop large scab and lessen the risk of another nose bleed
- Give first aid information and simple steps to stop or manage nose bleeds
- To remove Merocel or RapidRhino pack — see Nasal packing
In child
- Usually local trauma or inflammation in anterior nose and settles with pinching. Often scab (crusting) in nose removed (picked, knocked, lifted off)
- Foreign bodies in nose may cause bleeding or discharge of pus
- May need urgent referral to ENT specialist for removal
- If bleeding heavy — review in 1 day, POC Test — Hb
- If frequent nose bleeds, easy bruising, other bleeding episodes — medical consult to check FBC and clotting studies and consider referral to ENT specialist