| Literature DB >> 29936627 |
A M S Buchberger1, A Baumann2, F Johnson1, N Peters1, G Piontek1, K Storck1, A Pickhard1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of this retrospective study was to identify the impact of oral anticoagulants on epistaxis with the focus on new oral anticoagulants.Entities:
Keywords: Epistaxis; New oral anticoagulants; Oral anticoagulants
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29936627 PMCID: PMC6060781 DOI: 10.1007/s00405-018-5043-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 0937-4477 Impact factor: 2.503
Fig. 1Age distribution of the epistaxis cohort (n = 541). Median age 64.2. Gender distribution: male 57.3%; female 42.7%. Median age < 18 years: 12.3
Epistaxis cohort for 2014 above the age of 18 with descriptive statistics
| All cases > 18 | Outpatient | Inpatient | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of cases | 600 | 510 | 90 |
| Median age in years | 66.6 | 66.0 | 69.7 |
| Gender | |||
| Female | 256 | 215 | 41 |
| Male | 344 | 295 | 49 |
| Female:Male | 1:1.3 | 1:1.4 | 1:1.2 |
| Cause of bleeding | |||
| Trauma | (18) | (72) | (9) |
| Hypertensive emergency | (125) | (105) | (20) |
| Relapse | (47) | (25) | (22) |
| Unknown | (347) | (308) | (39) |
| Location of bleeding | |||
| Anterior | (436) | (402) | (34) |
| Posterior | (35) | (13) | (22) |
| Conchae nasales | (39) | (30) | (9) |
| Telangiectasis | (8) | (5) | (3) |
| Unknown | (82) | (60) | (22) |
| Site of bleeding | |||
| Left | (290) | (241) | (49) |
| Right | (263) | (227) | (36) |
| Both sides | (36) | (31) | (5) |
| Unknown | (11) | (11) | – |
| Therapy | |||
| Conservative | (23) | (21) | (2) |
| Bipolar coagulation | (409) | (382) | (27) |
| Anterior packing | (138) | (99) | (39) |
| Posterior packing | (7) | (2) | (5) |
| Surgery (i.e. ligation of sphenopalatine artery) | (16) | (1) | (15) |
| Interventional embolization | (2) | – | (2) |
| Severity of bleeding | |||
| Hb relevant | (62) | (24) | (38) |
| < 0.5 mg/dl | (538) | (486) | (52) |
| 0.5–0.9 | (25) | (14) | (11) |
| 1.0–1.9 | (24) | (7) | (17) |
| 2.0–2.9 | (6) | – | (6) |
| 3.0–3.9 | (4) | (2) | (2) |
| 4.0–4.9 | (1) | – | (1) |
| > 5.0 | (2) | (1) | (1) |
| Deranged coagulation | |||
| – | (139) | (102) | (37) |
| Quick/INR | (11) | (5) | (6) |
| aPTT | (96) | (79) | (17) |
| Thrombocytes | (4) | – | (4) |
| aPTT&INR | (27) | (18) | (9) |
| Anticoagulation | |||
| (401) | (344) | (57) | |
| NOAC | (43) | (34) | (9) |
| COAC (Phenprocoumon) | (138) | (116) | (22) |
| 1 PAI | (100) | (89) | (11) |
| Heparinoids | (9) | (8) | (1) |
| 2 PAI | (38) | (37) | (1) |
| NOAC + 1 PAI | (16) | (11) | (5) |
| COAC + 1 PAI | (41) | (37) | (4) |
| COAC + 2 PAI | (11) | (8) | (3) |
| NOAC + COAC | (3) | (2) | (1) |
| NOAC + COAC + 2 PAI | (2) | (2) | – |
| Complicated/serious courses | |||
| (77) | (25) | (52) | |
| Relapses | (47) | (25) | (22) |
| Surgery | (16) | (1) | (15) |
| Embolization | (2) | – | (2) |
| Admission ≥ 4 nights | (47) | – | (47) |
Age, percentage of admission, length of stay, percentage of severe courses, hb-relevant bleedings, relapses and successful therapy compared between the distinct groups of anticoagulants and non-anticoagulated patients
| Medication | Median age in years | Admission ( | Median number of nights | Severe courses ( | Hb-relevant bleedings ( | Relapses ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| None ( | 53.7 | (33) | 4.1 | (24) | (16) | (17) |
| NOAC ( | 77.9▲ | (9) | 2.3▼ | (2) | (4) | (6) |
| COAC ( | 74.4▲ | (22) | 3.4▼ | (10) | (17) | (13) |
| PAI ( | 71.2▲ | (11) | 4.4▲ | (5) | (11) | (11) |
| Combination ( | 71.1▲ | (14) | 4.4▲ | (6) | (13) | (31) |
Odds ratios and p values are in relation to the group without medication. The inverted triangles ▲▼ indicate increases/decreases in comparison to patients without medication
CI confidence interval
Fig. 2Underlying disease and risk factors for epistaxis of the in-patient cohort (n = 90). 77.8% of all admitted patients presented with ≥ 1 preexisting diseases