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Should Patients with Posterior Nasal Packing Require ICU Admission?

by C. Eduardo Corrales, MD, and Richard L. Goode, MD • September 7, 2014

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Trio Best PracticeBackground

Ten percent of all episodes of epistaxis occur in the posterior nose, making posterior epistaxis a commonly encountered emergency for both emergency department physicians and otolaryngologists. Severe idiopathic nontraumatic posterior nasal epistaxis is an otolaryngologic emergency that occurs primarily in middle aged and elderly individuals who often have underlying chronic cardiac and respiratory comorbidities. Sudden unexplained deaths have been reported with posterior nasal packing as well as respiratory distress, hypoxia, cardiac dysrhythmias, myocardial infarction, and cerebral ischemia. Once the bleeding has been controlled with posterior packing, the decision of where to admit the patient for observation must be made. Because of the above complications, debate remains as to whether patients with posterior nasal packing require intensive care unit (ICU) monitoring.

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September 2014

Best Practice

The literature reporting ward admission of patients with epistaxis treated with posterior nasal packing is relatively poor. There are no prospective randomized studies specifically analyzing this question. The preponderance of published evidence suggest admitting most patients with posterior nasal packing to the otolaryngology ward, with continuous pulse oximetry, and selectively admitting some patients with serious comorbidities (heart disease, arrhythmias, OSA) or major blood loss to higher levels of care. Read the full article in The Laryngoscope.

Filed Under: Practice Focus, Rhinology, TRIO Best Practices Tagged With: ICU, rhinologyIssue: September 2014

You Might Also Like:

  • When Is Antibiotic Prophylaxis for Nasal Packing Indicated?
  • Is Posterior Nasal Nerve Ablation Effective in Treating Symptoms of Allergic Rhinitis?
  • Are Routine Dissolvable Nasal Dressings Necessary Following ESS?
  • Can Posterior Septal Nasal Floor Mucosal Flap During Skull Base Reconstruction Repair Cerebrospinal Fluid Leaks?

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