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  2. Nosebleed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nosebleed

    If pressure and chemical cauterization cannot stop bleeding, nasal packing is the mainstay of treatment. [21] Nasal packing is typically categorized into anterior nasal packing and posterior nasal packing. [22] Nasal packing may also be categorized into dissolvable and non-dissolvable types.

  3. Hemotympanum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemotympanum

    Following nasal surgery or frequent nosebleeds, gauze or cotton may be inserted into the nose to stop the bleeding. This process is called therapeutic nasal packing. Nasal packing sometimes causes blood to back up into the middle ear, causing hemotympanum. Removing the packing may allow the blood to drain from the ear.

  4. Emergency bleeding control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_bleeding_control

    Arterial bleeding: As the name suggests, blood flow originating in an artery. With this type of bleeding, the blood is typically bright red to yellowish in colour, due to the high degree of oxygenation. Blood typically exits the wound in spurts, rather than in a steady flow; the blood spurts out in time with the heartbeat. The amount of blood ...

  5. Talk:Nosebleed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Nosebleed

    Eventually the body will stop clotting and the nasal passages will have to be cauterized. "from treatment section. Removal of the nasal packing does not remove the clot all the time and you say it is not recommended yet you site no source. Remember the no original research policy. Nasal packings are used in emergency rooms as well as commercial ...

  6. Hemoptysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemoptysis

    Amounts of blood: large amounts of blood, or there is blood-streaked sputum; Probable source of bleeding: Is the blood coughed up, or vomited? Bloody sputum. color, characters: blood-streaked, fresh blood, frothy pink, bloody gelatinous. Accompanying symptoms fever, chest pain, coughing, purulent sputum, mucocutaneous bleeding, jaundice.

  7. 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.

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    mail.aol.com

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  9. Hypertensive emergency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertensive_emergency

    A hypertensive emergency is not based solely on an absolute level of blood pressure, but also on a patient's baseline blood pressure before the hypertensive crisis occurs. Individuals with a history of chronic hypertension may not tolerate a "normal" blood pressure, and can therefore present symptomatically with hypotension , including fatigue ...