Nasal Septal Hematoma

Anatomy:

·      The vascular supply to the septal cartilage is provided through the perichondrium.

·      A hematoma lifts the perichondrium, disrupting blood supply to the cartilage.

Signs and Symptoms:

·      Discolored lateral bulging discolored.

·      Nasal septal hematoma appears as blue, boggy swelling.

·      Pediatrics can present with nasal obstruction, pain, rhinorrhea, and fever.

 

Procedure:

·      If hematoma is small, can use a needle to attempt to aspirate clot. If failing or larger hematoma then place patient in “sniffing position,” and do rhinoscopy with a nasal speculum, light source, suction, irrigation, and packing materials.

·      Anesthetize the nasal mucosa by placing three cotton pledgets soaked in a 1:1 mixture of 4% lidocaine solution for 5 minutes, followed by infiltrative anesthesia if required.

·      Make a small horizontal incision superficially through the mucosa. Do not incise the cartilaginous septum.

·      Evacuate the clot with suction or with forceps.

·      Place bilateral anterior nasal packing coated in topical antibiotic ointment to prevent reaccumulating of the clot and keep the septum midline.

·      Discharge with 24-hour ENT of ED follow-up.

·      Consider prophylactic antibiotics (cover for staph aureus, H. flu, strep pneumo (Amoxicillin-clavulanate)) for patients with packing in place, but not completely necessary if the packing will be removed in 24 to 36 hours.

·      Bilateral hematomas can be drained in the OR

Complications:

·      Permanent thickening of the septum

·      Partial airway obstruction of the nasal passage

·      Necrosis and subsequent erosion of the septum, resulting in communication between the nasal passageways

·      Secondary infection

·      Seroma or Abscess

·      Septal erosion leading to a saddle-nose deformity

 

Procedure Video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5xzYyxgQ0g

 

TLDR:

·      Examine the nasal septum in your trauma patients

·      Anesthetize, incise, evacuate clot

·      Prevent reformation with nasal tampon or packing

·      Consider antibiotics

·      Follow up ENT

·      Serious complications if missed

 

References:

https://www.aafp.org/afp/2004/1001/p1315.html

https://accessemergencymedicine.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?bookid=683&sectionid=45343819#57718045

Tintinalli’s Emergency Medicine a Comprehensive Study Guide 8th Edition

https://wikem.org/wiki/Nasal_septal_hematoma

 

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