| Literature DB >> 36106282 |
Olivia Gorbatkin1, Jean Pearce2, Monique Goldschmidt3, Anita Thomas4, Elizabeth Sanseau5, Daisy Ciener6, Regina Toto5, Ashley E Keilman4.
Abstract
Severe, uncontrolled epistaxis in a pediatric patient can lead to a compromised bloody airway and the potential need for significant volume resuscitation secondary to hemorrhagic shock if not managed emergently. In this report, a simulated 11-month-old patient with underlying liver disease presents to the emergency department setting. The goal was to familiarize advanced pediatric emergency medicine trainees and experienced providers with immediate bedside interventions and clinical management steps for a patient with severe, difficult-to-control epistaxis to increase preparedness for future clinical scenarios. Additionally, this case highlights resuscitation considerations for patients with liver disease, including sources of bleeding, consulting services, medications, and approach to massive transfusion in liver disease.Entities:
Keywords: epistaxis; hemorrhagic shock; liver disease; nasal packing; pediatric emergency; simulation; volume resuscitation
Year: 2022 PMID: 36106282 PMCID: PMC9451106 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.27784
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Facilitator overview, pediatric emergency medicine simulation: severe epistaxis.
ED = emergency department; PICU = pediatric intensive care unit; CBC = complete blood count; CMP = complete metabolic panel; PT/INR = prothrombin time/international normalized ratio; PTT = partial thromboplastin time
| Patient: Tina, Age: 11 month old, Weight: 10 kg, Chief complaint: nosebleed | |
| Brief case description | Tina is an 11-month-old female with a history of end-stage liver disease secondary to biliary atresia presenting to the ED for epistaxis. On arrival at the ED, she is awake, alert, breathing comfortably, and tachycardic, but normotensive. Anticipated interventions include bedside treatment of epistaxis, early ENT consult, and recognition and management of progressive hemorrhagic shock. Despite these interventions, the patient will have worsening epistaxis and concern for airway compromise, requiring intubation. The team may discuss the need for fluid vs. blood resuscitation, and the team will be asked if they want to initiate a massive transfusion protocol (institution dependent) to treat hemorrhagic shock. Participants will need to re-evaluate the patient’s clinical stability and the effectiveness of their interventions. The case will conclude with intubation and transfer to the PICU |
| Participant roles (required) | Simulation facilitator, Team lead/head of the bed, Bedside provider |
| Participant roles (optional, virtual or in person) | Co-simulation facilitator, Bedside nurse, Family communicator, Consultant communicator, Pharmacist, Simulation technician, Critical action checklist reviewer, Observers |
| Supplies | Monitors, oxygen with mask interfaces, suction, intubation supplies, airway adjuncts (supraglottic airway, oropharyngeal airway, etc), medications, nasal packing sponge, nasal balloon catheter with syringe, institution-specific massive transfusion protocol algorithm |
| Learning objectives, 1 | Discuss management approach for suspected anterior and/or posterior nosebleeds. A. Demonstrate bedside interventions (ideal positioning, nasal packing, topical medications). B. Verbalize the need for early ENT consultation |
| Learning objectives, 2 | Verbalize the need for blood products. A. List key lab tests for the patient presenting with hemorrhage. B. Recognize the need for blood products, including modifications to massive transfusion protocol on underlying liver disease |
| Learning objectives, 3 | Discuss considerations and indications for intubation to protect the airway in case of nasopharyngeal or oral bleeding. Verbalize the need for airway backup given the anticipated difficulty |
| Critical actions, Clinical state #1: Initial assessment | 1. Examine the patient and place monitors. 2. Verbalize or perform bedside interventions. 3. Obtain labs/diagnostic studies (CBC, CMP, PT/INR, PTT, fibrinogen, type and screen, blood gas. Consider blood culture). 4. Collect focused history. 5. Verbalize differential diagnosis for epistaxis. 6. Consult ENT and hepatology (not available to come emergently or will arrive in 15 minutes) |
| Critical actions, Clinical State #2: Worsening bleeding involving the oropharynx | 1. Identify worsening bleeding. 2. Attempt bedside nasal packing (if not gone in State #1). 3. Attempt topical hemostatic medication (if not gone in State #1). 4. Identify worsening vitals and the concern for hemorrhagic shock. 5. Initiate fluid resuscitation. 6. Initiate transfusion per institutional protocol (fill in): _____Packed red blood cells,_____Fresh frozen plasma, _____Platelets, _____Other |
| Critical actions, Clinical state #3: Airway management | 1. Identify airway compromise due to blood in the oropharynx. 2. Perform endotracheal Intubation. 3. Confirm intubation with chest X-ray. 4. Adjunct airway as needed |
| Critical actions, Clinical state #4: Stabilization of patient, admission to PICU | Transfer to PICU |
| Ideal scenario flow | Once the patient is roomed, the team correctly identifies concern for epistaxis vs. esophageal variceal bleeding and applies packing/topical medications, obtains IV access, and sends labs. The team will initiate volume resuscitation and implement a massive transfusion protocol (per institution guidelines). The team recognizes the need to secure the airway and PICU transfer. Participants will need to continually re-evaluate the patient’s clinical stability and the effectiveness of their interventions |
| Anticipated management mistakes | 1. Failure to optimize bedside hemostasis with appropriate positioning, pressure, and nasal packing with topical medication. 2. Failure to recognize the importance of early ENT consult. 3. Failure to consider esophageal varices as a potential bleeding source. 4. Delayed recognition and treatment of hemorrhagic shock via fluid resuscitation and massive transfusion in a patient with underlying liver disease. 5. Failure to recognize management of difficult airway - preparation, equipment, and consultant (anesthesia) resources |
Initial presentation, State #1.
HPI = history of present illness; PMH = past medical history; PERRL = pupils equal and reactive to light and accommodation; EOMI = extraocular muscles intact
| Initial presentation | |
| Triage note: 1 liner | 11-month-old, being held on parent’s lap with active bleeding from nares. Awake and alert |
| Triage note: Vitals | Heart rate 140, oxygen saturation (SpO2) 97%, blood pressure 90/60, respiratory rate 30, temperature 36.8°C, weight 10 kg |
| HPI | Tina is an 11-month-old female with end-stage liver disease secondary to biliary atresia presenting with uncontrolled epistaxis. She is brought in by her mother after a 25-minute nosebleed. The patient has had prior nosebleeds that have resolved at home in 10 minutes. No history of trauma. Mom reports subjective fever, attributed to teething. Denies other associated symptoms |
| HPI: Sample history (if asked) | Signs/symptoms: fever, nasal bleeding. Allergies: none. Meds: parent unable to recall. PMH: end-stage liver disease secondary to biliary atresia, currently awaiting a liver transplant. Unable to proceed with transplant 1 month ago due to viral illness, but has been stable since convalescence. Last intake: about 3 hours ago. Events preceding: as above |
| Additional history | Past medical/surgical history: biliary atresia. Medications: parents unsure. Allergies: none. Family history: none. Social history: lives with mom at home. No pets |
| Physical examination (primary assessment, secondary assessment) | |
| Vitals | Heart rate 170, oxygen saturation (SpO2) 97%, blood pressure 90/60, respiratory rate 44, temperature 36.8°C |
| General | Anxious, sitting on parent’s lap, leaning back with active nasal bleeding, more distressed with exam |
| HEENT | Patent airway, no signs of head trauma, PERRL, EOMI, (+) scleral icterus, no hemotympanum, bilateral nares obstructed by the blood which is becoming increasingly brisk, uncooperative and flailing when attempting nasal speculum exam, oropharynx initially clear though blood starts to appear in the posterior oropharynx |
| Neck | Supple |
| Lungs | Slightly tachypneic, clear to auscultation bilaterally, no stridor or wheezing |
| Cardiovascular | Tachycardic, 2+ peripheral pulses, capillary refill 2-3 seconds |
| Abdomen | Abdomen soft, nontender, mildly distended with liver edge felt ~2 cm below right costal margin, unable to palpate spleen, normal bowel sounds, no masses, no fluid wave or bulging flanks. |
| Neurological | Opening eyes spontaneously, spontaneous movements, making sounds and crying, pupils 3 mm to 2 mm, moving all extremities equally, no focal deficits |
| Skin | No rash or bruises. Few telangiectasias on the abdomen. Skin jaundiced |
| Genitourinary | Normal genitourinary examination |
| Psychiatric | Fearful of examiners, and appropriate clinging to caregiver |
Stepwise progression of care.
PICU = pediatric intensive care unit
| Stepwise progression of the case | ||
| Intervention/Time Point in scenario | Change in case | Additional information |
| State #1, Initial presentation: Triage nurse notifies the team of patients arrival, providers go to the bedside | Learners should enter the patient room with assigned team roles, assess ABCs, confirm monitors in place, ask for current history and vitals, and examine the patient | See Table |
| Bedside management of epistaxis | The learner should optimize head positioning (forward tilt, nose down, and firmly compress nasal cartilage just inferior to nasal bone). Can perform oral suctioning. If correct positioning and compression occur, nasal bleeding slows but continues. The learner should recognize the need to call ENT emergently and discuss bedside nasal packing options (supplies including topical medication agents). Consider hepatology consult | Packing options: foley, nasal packing sponge, nasal balloon |
| Nasal packing initiated on patient | Learner should request material. If learner does not know what material to request, nurse can prompt with, “We have a bedside nasal balloon or a foley.” If the learner does not request a topical medication on packing material, a nurse can ask, “Would you like any topical medication to place on the packing materials to help with clotting?” The case advances to the next section after 1-2 minutes with continued oozing blood from the nose | Packing materials: nasal packing sponge, nasal balloon, foley, suction. Topical medications: oxymetazoline, phenylephrine TXA, lidocaine |
| IV access obtained x 1. Lab results requested. State #2 triggered when the patient begins vomiting bright red blood or after 5 minutes from case start | Lab results available upon request. If the participants do not request any labs, can have the embedded participant nurse prompt when putting in the IV: “Do you want me to collect any blood for labs?” Learners should contact hepatology specialists due to concern for esophageal varices, need for additional interventions | EPOC labs immediately available: pH: 7.37, pCO2: 37 mmHg, pO2: 43 mmHg, Na: 134 mmol/L, K: 4.4 mmol/L, Ca: 8.6 mg/dL, Cl: 105 mmol/L, glucose: 100 mg/dL, lactate: 1.9 mmol/L, creatinine: 0.2 mg/dL, hematocrit: 31 %. See Table |
| State #2, Worsening: Vitals reassessed. Heart rate 190, blood pressure 75/40, respiratory rate 50, SaO2 96%, Temperature 37.0°C, ETCO2 patient unable to tolerate/obtain nasal ETCO2. Physical exam: as initial, but with bright red emesis, 4-5 sec CR and feeling cooler, seems sleepier, and vital signs as above | If the team doesn’t initiate fluid resuscitation, the nurse asks, “Are we worried about hemorrhagic shock?” The nurse asks, “She has significant blood loss and worsening tachycardia. When should we consider the massive transfusion protocol?” If the team does not ask for the second point of IV access, the nurse should prompt, “Do you want me to get another IV line on this patient?” | |
| Volume resuscitation | If >15 mL/kg blood is given or MTP initiated, advance to State 3 or after 10 minutes in State 2. Additionally, consider octreotide | If check bedside EPOC Hgb again, should be 6. If hepatology not yet consulted, prompt learner with, “Are there any additional consultants who you would like to call?” If no blood ordered after 3 minutes, facilitator can prompt with, “Are there any additional fluids or meds you want to give?” Note, octreotide is initiated as bolus of 1-2 µg/kg (max 100 µg), followed by 1-2 µg/kg/hour IV infusion, titrated to response (3-4 µg/kg/hour maximum) |
| State #3, Airway management: Once the airway is secured, move to State #4. Or if the airway not secured after 10 minutes in State #3, end scenario. Physical exam: same as State #3 (until sedated/paralyzed for airway) | The facilitator states there are copious bloody secretions in the oropharynx. The learner should identify pooling blood in the oropharynx without source control. If intubation is deferred, saturations decrease to the upper 80s from likely aspiration. If the team proceeds with intubation, note sedation meds, ETT size, and blade size. The team should discuss calling for anesthesia (or the most experienced advanced airway provider). If the team does not call, the facilitator to note and discuss in debrief | ETT: 3.5-4.0 cuffed. Blade: MIL 1 Intubation meds for sedation: etomidate 0.3 mg/kg, ketamine 1-2 mg/kg. Not as ideal due to cause of hypotension/unstable: propofol 1-1.5 mg/kg, midazolam 0.2-0.3 mg/kg. Other: fentanyl 1-5 µg/kg. Intubation meds for paralysis: rocuronium 1-1.2 mg/kg. If a chest X-ray requested post-intubation, it will show ETT at 1.7 cm above the carina. See Figure |
| State #4. Stabilization: Completion and signout to PICU/25 minutes. Vitals: Heart rate 160, blood pressure 85/45, respiratory rate 40, SaO2 98%, temperature 37.0°C. Physical exam: sedated/paralyzed, blood in bilateral nares, airway secured, tachycardic, perfusion 2-3 seconds, CTAB, abdomen continues with mild distension/telangiectasis, liver edge felt about 2 cm below RCM | The facilitator can play the role of PICU attending. Sample sign out: “11 mo F with liver failure presenting with hemorrhagic shock 2/2 to epistaxis vs variceal bleed, given ___ blood products, ___ fluid, airway secured with TT. Should consider bcx and abx given potential gastrointestinal bleed with risk of bacterial translocation not ruled out at this time.” | |
Labs.
pCO2 = venous carbon dioxide; pO2 = venous oxygen; Na = sodium; K = potassium; Ca = calcium; Cl = chloride; Glu = glucose; Lac = lactate; Crea = creatinine; Hct = hematocrit; WBC = white blood cells; Hbg = hemoglobin; Plt = platelets; CO2 = bicarbonate; BUN = blood urea nitrogen; Mg = magnesium; Phos = phosphorous; Total Bili = total bilirubin; Conj = conjugated bilirubin; Unconj = unconjugated bilirubin; AST = aspartate aminotransferase; ALT = alanine transaminase; GGT = gamma-glutamyl transferase; PT = prothrombin time; INR = international normalized ratio; APTT = activated partial thromboplastin clotting time; VBG = venous blood gas; Bicarb= bicarbonate; Temp = temperature
| EPOC labs immediately available | Sent to lab |
| pH: 7.37 | WBC: 8.3 K/µL |
| pCO2: 37 mmHg | Hbg: 10.5 g/dL |
| pO2: 43 mmHg | Hct: 31 % |
| Na: 134 mmol/L | Plt : 95 THOU/µL |
| K: 4.4 mmol/L | |
| Ca: 8.6 mg/dL | Na: 134 mmol/L |
| Cl: 105 mmol/L | K: 4.4 mmol/L |
| Glu: 100 mg/dL | Cl: 105 mmol/L |
| Lac: 1.9 mmol/L | CO2: 16 mmol/L |
| Crea: 0.2 mg/dL | BUN: 4 mg/dL |
| Hct: 31% | Creat: 0.2 mg/dL |
| Glucose: 100 mg/dL | |
| Albumin: 2.8 g/dL | |
| Ca: 8.6 mg/dL | |
| Mg: 2.1 mg/dL | |
| Phos: 4.0 mg/dL | |
| Total Bili: 11.4 mg/dL | |
| Conj: 9.1 mg/dL | |
| Unconj: 2.3 mg/dL | |
| AST: 304 U/L | |
| ALT: 1331 U/L | |
| Lipase: 491 U/L | |
| GGT: 498 U/L | |
| PT: 19 seconds | |
| INR: 1.6 | |
| APTT: 40 seconds | |
| Fibrinogen: 134 mg/dL | |
| Lactic acid: 1.9 mmol/L | |
| VBG | |
| pH: 7.37 | |
| pCO2: 37 mmHg | |
| pO2: 43 mmHg | |
| Bicarb: 21 mmol/L | |
| Base excess: -3.8 | |
| Temp: 38.6 °C | |
| Type and screen: B+ |
Figure 1Portable chest X-ray.
Figure 2Bedside interventions slide.
Figure 3Nasal tamponade slide.
Figure 4Initial labs slide.
Figure 7Considerations in volume resuscitation in liver failure slide.
Figure 8Airway management slide.
Simulation participant survey results.
Median response from Likert scale: 1 = strongly disagree; 2 = disagree; 3 = neutral; 4 = agree; 5 = strongly agree.
| Question | Median (n) | Range |
| How likely are you to recommend this session to a colleague? | 5 (41) | 3-5 |
| Following the simulation, I feel comfortable with bedside management of epistaxis including nasal compression, topical medications, and nasal tamponade | 4 (41) | 3-5 |
| Following the simulation, I understand the need to consult otolaryngology early in uncontrolled epistaxis | 5 (30) | 4-5 |
| Following the simulation, I have a better understanding of when and how to initiate the massive transfusion protocol | 5 (41) | 2-5 |
| Following the simulation, I understand how to approach continued bleeding in the setting of underlying liver disease and the need for thoughtful fluid resuscitation | 5 (35) | 4-5 |
| Following this simulation, I feel comfortable managing a bloody oropharynx, including types of suction, intubation equipment, and when to activate a difficult airway team | 4 (30) | 4-5 |
| Following this simulation, I have a better understanding of when to consider intubation to protect the airway in case of nasopharyngeal or oral bleeding if the Glasgow Coma Scale score is normal | 4 (11) | 3-5 |
| The debrief promoted reflection and team discussion | 5 (41) | 4-5 |