| Literature DB >> 34104582 |
David Berry1, Jestin N Carlson2, Eunice Singletary3, David A Zideman4, Jennifer Ring5.
Abstract
Epistaxis, or nosebleed, is bleeding from the nostril(s), nasal cavity, or nasopharynx. Anterior nasal bleeding is the most common location for spontaneous nontraumatic epistaxis and is commonly treated with manual compression to the nasal alae. Cryotherapy is also routinely recommended in conjunction with manual compression in the first aid and ED setting. We performed a scoping review on behalf of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation First Aid Task Force guided by the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for scoping reviews (PRISMA-ScR). We searched Embase, Cochrane, and PubMed databases for published studies, without date restrictions, and we searched the gray literature using Google.com and Google Scholar. The websites of selected resuscitation councils were searched for guidelines relating to the management of epistaxis. References from included studies were hand-searched. Our published and gray literature search identified 1255 and 61,315 records, respectively. After removing duplicates and following selection criteria, we included 21 records from the published literature and 11 records from the gray literature. Our scoping review found that most of the published studies and website documents focused on managing nontraumatic epistaxis in the first aid setting. They provide recommendations for the use of cryotherapy based on expert opinion or indirect evidence extrapolated from cryotherapy-associated changes in nasal submucosal temperature, nasal blood flow, and nasal blood volume in healthy subjects (three studies). We did not identify any prospective, randomized trials comparing the efficacy of cryotherapy as an intervention for nontraumatic epistaxis in the first aid setting. The limited literature identified in this scoping review does not support the development of a systematic review but highlights the need for future research to better understand the role of cryotherapy in the first aid setting.Entities:
Keywords: cold packs; cryotherapy; epistaxis; first aid; ice packs; lay provider; nasal bleeding; prehospital
Year: 2021 PMID: 34104582 PMCID: PMC8174396 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.14832
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Scoping review inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
| Population | Adults and children, nontraumatic spontaneous, anterior epistaxis | Infants (< 1-year-old) nontraumatic, idiopathic epistaxis, posterior epistaxis, chronic epistaxis |
| Intervention | Cryotherapy or cryotherapy with nose pinching (manual or mechanical) | Any intervention not feasible in a first aid setting (e.g., commercial ice packs or machines), intranasal cryotherapy application |
| Comparison | Nose pinching alone | Any intervention not feasible in a first aid setting (e.g., cautery, intranasal, packing, silver, tranexamic acid) |
| Outcome | Critical outcomes; time to hemorrhage control (minutes), hemostasis (yes/no), critical, reduction of nasal blood volume (mL, cm2, cm3), reduction of pain measured via pain scale (pain scale). Important outcomes; the need for follow-up care (yes/no), adverse events (yes/no). Less important outcomes; recovery time (days/min), reduction of swelling (volume). | |
| Study design | Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and non-randomized studies (non-randomized controlled trials, interrupted time series, controlled before-and-after studies, cohort studies) | Unpublished studies (e.g., conference abstracts, trial protocols) were excluded unless subsequently picked up in the gray literature search |
| Timeframe and language | All years. All languages, as long as an English abstract is available. | Articles in a language other than English, for which no English abstract is available or unable to translate. |
| Setting | First aid provider in the first aid setting | Healthcare providers in emergency departments or clinics. |
Figure 1PRISMA diagram of included studies.
PRISMA: Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses
Indirect evidence study characteristics and findings.
L, left; R, right
| Author, year, country | Study design | Population | Intervention | Control | Outcome | Findings on our outcomes, as presented in the article |
| Ozturk et al., 2014, Turkey [ | Observational | 15 patients (mean age=28.8; 9 female) at least 18 years of age with no nasal symptoms within 3 weeks, and not pregnant. | Nasal dorsal skin cooling using two ice packs applied to left (L) and right (R) side of nose for 10 minutes (n=15). | No application, baseline | Cross-sectional area (cm2) and nasal cavity volume (cm3) via acoustic rhinometry | Mean values for the sum of the L and R first minimal cross-sectional area and second minimal cross-sectional area revealed no statistical differences, for either parameter at any between any intervals. Means values for nasal cavity volume revealed no statistical differences, for any parameter, between any intervals. |
| Porter et al., 1991, United Kingdom [ | Cross-over, Randomized | 16 healthy subjects (mean age=32, range 25-40) with no history of the nasal disease, previous nasal surgery or symptoms, and a normal rheoscopic examination. | Ice contained with a surgical glove applied to forehead or mouth for 3 minutes each (n=16). | Same, but at body temperature for 3 minutes each. | Nasal mucosal blood flow, measured in flux (velocity and concentration of the moving blood cells) | Oral ice packs produced a significant decrease in nasal mucosal blood flow (p<0.05, average decrease=23% {standard error=5.9}) compared to control (average decrease=5%; standard error not calculated/provided). Oral ice packs produced a fall in flux in 9 of 16 (56%) subjects, a rise in 1 (6%), and 6 (37%) experienced no change. Ice packs to the forehead produced a fall in flux in 1 of 16 (6%) subjects, a rise in 1 (6%). |
| Porter, 1991, United Kingdom [ | Cross-over, Randomized | 13 healthy subjects (mean age=30, range 25-40) with no nasal disease or treatment. | (a) Ice pack wrapped in paper toweling held to the forehead by subject for 15 minutes. (b) Ice cubes sucked into the mouth for 15 minutes. (c) Combination of (a) and (b) for 15 minutes. | No application, baseline | Nasal submucosal temperature (°C) | A significant difference between the nasal submucosal temperature ice pack to the forehead (a) compared to ice cubs in the mouth (b) (p=.0.026), favoring ice cubes alone. A significant difference between nasal submucosal temperature in the ice pack to the forehead compared to the combined stimulus (c) (p=.0.006), favoring combined stimulus. In all subjects (n=13, 100%) ice cubes in the mouth (b) produced a lower nasal submucosal temperature. The ice pack to the forehead (a) produced a decrease in nasal mucosal temperature in 7 of 13 (53%) subjects. |
| Scheibe et al., 2006, Germany [ | Cross-over | 15 healthy subjects (range 25-40, 7 female) with no reported breathing difficulties, acute nasal allergies, or acute rhinitis; nasal endoscopy by an ENT specialist revealed no pathology. | Ice collar (4°C) placed onto neck region for 10 minutes. | No application, baseline | Nasal blood volume via optical rhinometry (measured in nm) for the whole nose and at the septum, randomized. | A significant (p<0.01) decrease in nasal blood volume for regional measurements at the septum. Decrease in nasal blood volume at nasal septum was, on average, observed after approximately 2 minutes t1=111 sec ± 73 sec); decrease reached its maximum after approximately 6 minutes (t2=337 sec ± 119 sec). |
| Teymoortash et al., 2003, Germany [ | Cross-over | 56 healthy subjects (mean age=30, range 17-48) with normal rhinoscopy and no history of nasal allergy or acute or recurrent symptoms of rhinitis. | Ice pack applied all-round the neck for 5 minutes. | No application, baseline | Nasal mucosal microcirculatory blood flow via laser Doppler flowmetry, nasal mucosal blood content (indirectly via conventional computer-aided anterior rhinomanometry by measuring alternations in nasal airflow and airway patency). | Following cold application, nasal mucosal blood flow decreased from 1368.8 ± 927.9 to 1130.5 ± 792.2), (p=0.11). Total nasal inspiratory airflow before the application was 513.9±190.4 cm3/s, after exposure to cold 471.5±164.6 cm3/s (p=0.08). Total nasal expiratory airflow before the application was 474.2±211.7 cm3/s, after exposure to cold 443.1±162.4 cm3/s (p=0.30). |
| Yamagiwa et al., 1990, Denmark [ | Cross-over | 10 healthy subjects (mean age=21±11.0, range 24-54) with no significant complaints or rhinoscopically overt nasal abnormalities. | (a) Feet cooling (both) in large tub (0-4°C) immersed 30 cm from heel for 5 minutes, (n=10). (b) One hand and forearm cooling in a bucket (0-4°C) immersed to around 23 cm from the middle fingertip for 5 minutes (n=9). | No application, baseline | Nasal cavity volume (mL) rhinometry for L and R cavities. | Foot cooling arm. In the exposure period, nasal airway volume was significantly higher than preexposure values in 4 of 10 (40%) subjects, none showed significantly lower values. Hand cooling arm. In the exposure period, nasal airway volume was significantly higher than preexposure values in 1 of 9 (11%) of subjects, lower in 2 of 9 (22%), and no difference in 6 of 9 (66%) |
Additional Embase full-text paper characteristics and findings.
| Author, year, country | Study design, setting/audience | Intervention concepts | Cryotherapy statements | Direct pressure application time |
| Bird, 1999, United Kingdom [ | Narrative: A&E department | Direct pressure; Cryotherapy | “Local vasoconstriction induced by the application of ice to the nose, neck or mouth appears to do little in reducing blood flow …” p. 11 | NA |
| Honeysett, 1982, United States [ | Narrative: Nursing | Direct pressure; Patient position & reassurance; Cryotherapy | “… application of ice packs or cubes is useful as they can be soothing as well as causing local vasoconstriction with encourages the bleeding to stop.” p. 578 | 5 min |
| Ludman, 1981, United Kingdom [ | Narrative: Clinical practice | Direct pressure; Cryotherapy | “… pinching the nostril between a finger and thumb and applying ice packs to the bridge of the nose.” p. 968 | N/A |
| McLarnon and Carrie, 2015, United Kingdom [ | Narrative: Clinical practice | Direct pressure; Patient position; Cryotherapy | “… alongside cooling with an ice pack on the nose or sucking an ice lolly if available.” p. 589 | 5-10 min Persistent, 20 min |
| Nicolas and Jassar, 2013, United Kingdom [ | Editorial: Clinical practice | Direct pressure; Patient position; Cryotherapy | “… cold compress to the nose, is often used in addition to, sucking ice cubes, which is thought to help vasoconstrict the blood vessels within the nasal mucosa; however, there is little clinical evidence to support this as a treatment option.” p. 704 | 10 min |
| Shellenbarger, 2000, United States [ | Narrative: Nursing | Direct pressure; Patient position; Cryotherapy | “… ice compresses over the middle face to promote vasoconstriction.” p. 50 | 5-30 min |
| Vaghela, 2005, United Kingdom [ | Technique: A&E department | Direct pressure; Patient position; Cryotherapy | “… ice pack applied to the nasal bridge.” p. 261 | 20 min |
Gray literature study characteristics and findings.
| Author, year, country | Study design, setting/audience | Intervention concepts | Cryotherapy statements | Direct pressure application time |
| Pope and Hobbs, 2005, United Kingdom [ | Narrative: Clinical practice | Direct pressure; Patient position; Cryotherapy | “... improved by a cold compress or the patient sucking on ice.” p. 310 | NA |
| Wong and Anat, 2018, Australia [ | Narrative: Family practice | Direct pressure; Patient position; Cryotherapy | “Applying ice packs around the neck and having the patient suck on ice significantly reduces nasal mucosa blood flow and can slow down the bleeding.7” p. E16 | 10 min |
| Record, 2015, United States [ | Practice guideline: Nursing | Direct pressure; Patient position; Cryotherapy | “Ice compresses to the forehead or neck may be used, but studies are inconclusive as to the usefulness of this maneuver (Teymoortash 2003; Scheibe, 2006).” p. 487 | 10 min |
| Upile et al., 2008, United Kingdom [ | Protocol: United Kingdom Healthcare System, first aid | Direct pressure; Cryotherapy | “… pinching the whole of the cartilaginous tip of the nose for 30 min followed by another 30 min of pressure and pack of ice on bridge of nose if bleeding continued.” p. 1351 | 30 min + 30 min |
| Epistaxis, 2020, N/A [ | Informational: Website | Direct pressure; Cryotherapy | “… putting an ice pack on to their forehead.” p. N/A | 20 min |
| Beck, 2018, German [ | Review: Primary and secondary care | Direct pressure; Patient position; Cryotherapy | “Local application of ice, e.g., at the back of the neck, is intended to encourage vasoconstriction of the blood vessels of the nose.” Its therapeutic value is a matter of debate and has been challenged in the literature (38).” p. 17 | 15-20 min |
EMBASE.com (Embase + Medline) initial search query and results.
| Approach | No. | Search string query (July 13, 2020) | Results |
| Nosebleed; nose near bleed (title or abstract) + first aid (title, abstract, keyword or index terms) + cold (title or abstract) | #1 | “epistaxis”/de OR epistaxis:ti,ab OR nosebleed*:ti,ab OR ({[nose OR nasal OR rhino*] NEAR/2 [blood OR bleed$ OR bleeding OR haemorrhag* OR hemorrhag*]}:ti,ab) | 25,792 |
| #2 | “first aid”/de OR “emergency treatment”/de OR “emergency medicine”/de OR “first aid”:ti,ab,kw,de OR “first response”:ti,ab,kw,de OR “first responder$”:ti,ab,kw,de OR bystander$:ti,ab,kw,de OR “by stander*”:ti,ab,kw,de OR “wilderness medicine”:ti,ab,kw,de | 89,878 | |
| #3 | ice:ti,ab OR cryo*:ti,ab OR cold:ti,ab OR cool:ti,ab OR cooling:ti,ab | 337,941 | |
| #4 | #1 AND (#2 OR #3) | 605 | |
| Nosebleed; nose (title) + cold (title) | #5 | “epistaxis”/de OR epistaxis:ti OR nosebleed*:ti OR nose:ti OR nasal:ti OR rhino*:ti | 106,480 |
| #6 | ice:ti OR cryo*:ti OR cold:ti OR cool:ti OR cooling:ti | 104,696 | |
| #7 | #5 AND #6 | 481 | |
| Nosebleed (title) + study design (trial; study) | #8 | epistaxis:ti OR nosebleed$:ti OR “nose bleed$”:ti | 3121 |
| #9 | #8 AND (“clinical protocol”/de OR “clinical study”/de OR “clinical trial”/de OR “comparative effectiveness”/de OR “comparative study”/de OR “controlled clinical trial”/de OR “controlled study”/de OR “multicenter study”/de OR “randomized controlled trial”/de OR “randomized controlled trial topic”/de) | 478 | |
| #10 | #4 OR #7 OR #9 | 1439 | |
| #11 | #10 NOT (rhinosinusitis:ti,ab,kw,de OR rhinorrhea:ti,ab,kw,de OR “common cold”:ti,ab,kw,de OR cryoablation:ti,ab,kw,de OR decongestant:ti,ab,kw,de OR rhinoplasty:ti,ab,kw,de OR ablation:ti,ab,kw,de OR tranexamic:ti,ab,kw,de OR ligation:ti,ab,kw,de) | 1032 | |
| #12 | #11 NOT ({conference abstract}/lim OR {conference review}/lim OR {editorial}/lim OR {erratum}/lim OR {note}/lim OR {book}/lim OR “case report”/de) | 739 | |
| #13 | #12 NOT ({“animal”/exp OR “nonhuman”/exp OR “rodent”/exp OR “animal experiment”/exp OR “experimental animal”/exp OR rat:ti,ab OR rats:ti,ab OR mouse:ti,ab OR mice:ti,ab OR dog$:ti,ab OR pig$:ti,ab OR porcine:ti,ab OR swine:ti,ab OR chick$:ti,ab} NOT “human”/exp) | 669 |
Cochrane library initial search query and results.
MeSH: medical subject headings
| No. | Search string query (July 13, 2020) | Results |
| 1 | MeSH descriptor: [Epistaxis] explode all trees | 204 |
| 2 | epistaxis:ti,ab OR nosebleed*:ti,ab OR ({nose:ti OR nasal:ti OR rhino*:ti} and {blood:ti or bleed*:ti or haemorrhage*:ti or hemorrhage*:ti}) | 8987 |
| 3 | #1 or #2 | 9024 |
| 4 | ice:ti,ab OR cryo*:ti,ab OR cold:ti,ab OR cool:ti,ab OR cooling:ti,ab | 17,670 |
| 5 | #3 and #4 | 207 |
| 6 | epistaxis:ti | 232 |
| 7 | #5 or #6 | 439 |
| 8 | #7 NOT (rhinosinusitis:ti,ab OR rhinorrhea:ti,ab OR “common cold”:ti,ab OR cryoablation:ti,ab OR decongestant:ti,ab OR rhinoplasty:ti,ab OR ablation:ti,ab) | 309 |
| Cochrane reviews | 2 | |
| Cochrane protocols | 1 | |
| Trials | 306 |
EMBASE.com (Embase + Medline) follow-up search query and results.
| No. | Search string query (January 14, 2021) | Results |
| 1 | “epistaxis”/de OR epistaxis:ti,ab OR nosebleed*:ti,ab OR ({[nose OR nasal OR rhino*] NEAR/2 [blood OR bleed$ OR bleeding OR haemorrhag* OR hemorrhag*]}:ti,ab) | 26,730 |
| 2 | “first aid”/de OR “emergency treatment”/de OR “emergency medicine”/de OR “first aid”:ti,ab,kw,de OR “first response”:ti,ab,kw,de OR “first responder$”:ti,ab,kw,de OR bystander$:ti,ab,kw,de OR “by stander*”:ti,ab,kw,de OR “wilderness medicine”:ti,ab,kw,de | 92,792 |
| 3 | ice:ti,ab OR cryo*:ti,ab OR cold:ti,ab OR cool:ti,ab OR cooling:ti,ab | 350,738 |
| 4 | #1 AND (#2 OR #3) | 621 |
| 5 | “epistaxis”/de OR epistaxis:ti OR nosebleed*:ti OR nose:ti OR nasal:ti OR rhino*:ti | 109,911 |
| 6 | ice:ti OR cryo*:ti OR cold:ti OR cool:ti OR cooling:ti | 108,359 |
| 7 | #5 AND #6 | 490 |
| 8 | epistaxis:ti OR nosebleed$:ti OR “nose bleed$”:ti | 3187 |
| 9 | #8 AND (“clinical protocol”/de OR “clinical study”/de OR “clinical trial”/de OR “comparative effectiveness”/de OR “comparative study”/de OR “controlled clinical trial”/de OR “controlled study”/de OR “multicenter study”/de OR “randomized controlled trial”/de OR “randomized controlled trial topic”/de) | 500 |
| 10 | #4 OR #7 OR #9 | 1484 |
| 11 | #10 NOT (rhinosinusitis:ti,ab,kw,de OR rhinorrhea:ti,ab,kw,de OR “common cold”:ti,ab,kw,de OR cryoablation:ti,ab,kw,de OR decongestant:ti,ab,kw,de OR rhinoplasty:ti,ab,kw,de OR ablation:ti,ab,kw,de OR tranexamic:ti,ab,kw,de OR ligation:ti,ab,kw,de) | 1064 |
| 12 | #11 NOT ({conference abstract}/lim OR {conference review}/lim OR {editorial}/lim OR {erratum}/lim OR {note}/lim OR {book}/lim OR “case report”/de) | 759 |
| 13 | #12 NOT ({“animal”/exp OR “nonhuman”/exp OR “rodent”/exp OR “animal experiment”/exp OR “experimental animal”/exp OR rat:ti,ab OR rats:ti,ab OR mouse:ti,ab OR mice:ti,ab OR dog$:ti,ab OR pig$:ti,ab OR porcine:ti,ab OR swine:ti,ab OR chick$:ti,ab} NOT “human”/exp) | 688 |
| 14 |
#13 AND [ | 7 |
Cochrane Library follow-up search query and results.
*In July 2020, the string found 8987 records. Believe fewer trials were due to changes made to the CENTRAL database.
| No. | Search string query (January 14, 2021) | Results |
| 1 | [mh epistaxis] | 207 |
| 2 | epistaxis:ti,ab OR nosebleed*:ti,ab OR ({nose:ti OR nasal:ti OR rhino*:ti} and {bloodti or bleed*:ti or haemorrhage*:ti or hemorrhage*:ti}) | 945 |
| 3 | #1 or #2 | 1009 |
| 4 | ice:ti,ab OR cryo*:ti,ab OR cold:ti,ab OR cool:ti,ab OR cooling:ti,ab | 18699 |
| 5 | #3 and #4 | 14 |
| 6 | epistaxis:ti | 244 |
| 7 | #5 or #6 | 258 |
| 8 | #7 NOT (rhinosinusitis:ti,ab OR rhinorrhea:ti,ab OR common cold:ti,ab OR cryoablation:ti,ab OR decongestant:ti,ab OR rhinoplasty:ti,ab OR ablation:ti,ab) | 250 |
| 9 | #8 with Publication Year from 2020 to 2021, with Cochrane Library publication date Between Jul 2020 and Jan 2021, in Trials | 7 |
| 10 | #8 with Cochrane library publication date between July 2020 and January 2021, in Cochrane reviews, Cochrane protocols | 0 |
PubMed clinical practice guideline and position statement search query and results.
MeSH: medical subject headings
| Approach | No. | Search string query (December 19, 2020) | Results |
| Title, abstract, keyword, or index terms | 1 | ("guideline"{Publication Type} OR "guidelines as topic"{MeSH Terms} OR "guideline"{All Fields}) AND ("epistaxis"{MeSH Terms} OR "epistaxis"{All Fields}) | 58 |
| 2 | ("protocol"{All Fields} OR "protocol s"{All Fields} OR "protocolized"{All Fields} OR "protocols"{All Fields}) AND ("epistaxis"{MeSH Terms} OR "epistaxis"{All Fields}) responder$:ti,ab,kw,de OR bystander$:ti,ab,kw,de OR “by stander*”:ti,ab,kw,de OR “wilderness medicine”:ti,ab,kw,de | 211 | |
| 269 |
Google.com literature search query and results.
| Approach | No. | Search string query (December 21, 2020) | Results |
| Limited to past year, verbatim, first 50 hits | 1 | “practice guideline” AND Epistaxis | 59,500 |
| 59,500 |
Google Scholar literature search query and results.
| Approach | No. | Search string query (December 28, 2020) | Results |
| Limited to verbatim, first 100 hits | 1 | "First aid" AND Epistaxis AND ICE NOT Chronic NOT Posterior NOT Cautery NOT intranasal NOT Idiopathic NOT Packing NOT Silver NOT Tranexamic”); | 3 |
| 2 | “First Aid Guidelines” | 853 | |
| 3 | "First aid" AND Nosebleed AND ICE OR Cryotherapy | 930 | |
| 1786 |
Resuscitation councils and sub-councils search query and results.
| Approach | No. | Search string query (December 28, 2020) | Results |
| Hand search | 1 | American Heart Association | 6 |
| 2 | European Resuscitation Council and associated Councils | 10 | |
| 3 | Heart and Stroke Foundation | 3 | |
| 4 | Australia and New Zealand Committee on Resuscitation (ANZCOR) | 1 | |
| 5 | Resuscitation Council of Asia and associated Councils | 7 | |
| 6 | Resuscitation Council of Southern Africa and associated Councils | 1 | |
| 7 | InterAmerican Heart Foundation | 1 | |
| 29 |