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  2. Woodruff's plexus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodruff's_plexus

    A nosebleed (epistaxis) usually occurs in the anterior part of the nose from an area known as Kiesselbach's plexus which consists of arteries. Woodruff's plexus is a venous plexus in the posterior part and a nosebleed here accounts for only between 5 and 10 per cent of nosebleeds. Older adults are most often affected. [5]

  3. Human nose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_nose

    Most nosebleeds occur in Kiesselbach's plexus, a vascular plexus in the lower front part of the septum involving the convergence of four arteries. A smaller proportion of nosebleeds that tend to be nontraumatic occur in Woodruff's plexus. Woodruff's plexus is a venous plexus of large thin-walled veins lying in the posterior part of the inferior ...

  4. Kiesselbach's plexus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiesselbach's_plexus

    Kiesselbach's plexus is an anastomotic arterial network (plexus) of four or five arteries in the nose supplying the nasal septum. It lies in the anterior inferior part of the septum known as Little's area, Kiesselbach's area, or Kiesselbach's triangle. It is a common site for anterior nosebleeds.

  5. Sphenopalatine artery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sphenopalatine_artery

    The sphenopalatine artery is a branch of the maxillary artery which passes through the sphenopalatine foramen into the cavity of the nose, at the back part of the superior meatus.

  6. Anterior ethmoidal artery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anterior_ethmoidal_artery

    The anterior ethmoidal artery is a branch of the ophthalmic artery in the orbit. [1] It exits the orbit through the anterior ethmoidal foramen alongside the anterior ethmoidal nerve.

  7. Wilhelm Kiesselbach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Kiesselbach

    Wilhelm Kiesselbach (1 December 1839 – 4 August 1902) was a German otolaryngologist born in Hanau. From 1859 he studied medicine at the universities of Göttingen , Marburg and Tübingen . In 1877/78 he worked as assistant under Wilhelm Olivier Leube in the polyclinic at the University of Erlangen .

  8. Myenteric plexus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myenteric_plexus

    The myenteric plexus (or Auerbach's plexus) provides motor innervation to both layers of the muscular layer of the gut, having both parasympathetic and sympathetic input (although present ganglion cell bodies belong to parasympathetic innervation, fibers from sympathetic innervation also reach the plexus), whereas the submucous plexus provides secretomotor innervation to the mucosa nearest the ...

  9. Cawthorne-Cooksey exercises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cawthorne-Cooksey_exercises

    Cawthorne-Cooksey exercises are exercises described in the 1940s to treat soldiers who had suffered injuries that resulted in balance problems during the war. [1] It forms the basis of the Epley maneuver which is the modern treatment of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo .