Berry David, Carlson Jestin N, Singletary Eunice, Zideman David A, Ring Jennifer
Kinesiology, Saginaw Valley State University, Saginaw, USA.
Emergency Department, Saint Vincent Hospital, Erie, USA.
Cureus. 2021 May 4;13(5):e14832. doi: 10.7759/cureus.14832.
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.
鼻出血,即流鼻血,是指从鼻孔、鼻腔或鼻咽部出血。前鼻出血是自发性非创伤性鼻出血最常见的部位,通常通过对鼻翼进行手动压迫来治疗。在急救和急诊科环境中,也常规建议在手动压迫的同时进行冷冻治疗。我们代表国际复苏联合会急救工作组,在系统评价和Meta分析扩展版的首选报告项目(PRISMA-ScR)的指导下进行了一项范围综述。我们在Embase、Cochrane和PubMed数据库中检索了无日期限制的已发表研究,并使用Google.com和Google Scholar检索了灰色文献。我们搜索了选定复苏委员会的网站,以查找与鼻出血管理相关的指南。对纳入研究的参考文献进行了手工检索。我们对已发表文献和灰色文献的检索分别识别出1255条和61315条记录。在去除重复记录并遵循选择标准后,我们纳入了21篇已发表文献中的记录和11篇灰色文献中的记录。我们的范围综述发现,大多数已发表的研究和网站文档都侧重于急救环境中非创伤性鼻出血的管理。它们基于专家意见或从健康受试者鼻腔黏膜下温度、鼻腔血流量和鼻腔血容量的冷冻治疗相关变化推断出的间接证据,提供了使用冷冻治疗的建议(三项研究)。我们没有找到任何前瞻性、随机试验来比较冷冻治疗作为急救环境中非创伤性鼻出血干预措施的疗效。在这项范围综述中识别出的有限文献不支持进行系统综述,但强调了未来研究的必要性,以便更好地了解冷冻治疗在急救环境中的作用。