Computed tomography findings in patients with primarily unknown causes of severe or recurrent epistaxis

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Computed tomography findings in patients with primarily unknown causes of severe or recurrent epistaxis. / van Horn, Noel; Faizy, Tobias Djamsched; Schoenfeld, Michael Hinrich; Kohlmann, Patrick; Broocks, Gabriel; Haag, Pascal; Fiehler, Jens; Habermann, Christian Richard; Karul, Murat.

In: PLOS ONE, Vol. 14, No. 8, 01.08.2019, p. e0220380.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

van Horn, N, Faizy, TD, Schoenfeld, MH, Kohlmann, P, Broocks, G, Haag, P, Fiehler, J, Habermann, CR & Karul, M 2019, 'Computed tomography findings in patients with primarily unknown causes of severe or recurrent epistaxis', PLOS ONE, vol. 14, no. 8, pp. e0220380. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220380

APA

van Horn, N., Faizy, T. D., Schoenfeld, M. H., Kohlmann, P., Broocks, G., Haag, P., Fiehler, J., Habermann, C. R., & Karul, M. (2019). Computed tomography findings in patients with primarily unknown causes of severe or recurrent epistaxis. PLOS ONE, 14(8), e0220380. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220380

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{e54d2a86fe2a44f59baccfb9a5aea16c,
title = "Computed tomography findings in patients with primarily unknown causes of severe or recurrent epistaxis",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: In addition to rhinoscopy, computed tomography of paranasal sinuses (CT) may be performed on patients with primary unknown cause of severe epistaxis (SE) or recurrent epistaxis (RE) to further assess the potential cause of bleeding. The aim of this study was to evaluate CT findings during the work-up of intractable epistaxis patients.METHODS: 6937 patients were treated in our emergency department with acute epistaxis between 2009-2018. 304/6937 patients underwent CT and rhinoscopy due to intractable SE or RE. 33 patients presented with head trauma prior to epistaxis and were excluded from the final analysis. In 271 cases the primary causes of SE (n = 252) or RE (n = 19) remained unknown. Two observers retrospectively evaluated CT scans for potential sources of epistaxis. Disagreement was settled by consensus. CT and rhinoscopy findings were compared.RESULTS: In 247/271 (91.1%) SE patients no related pathology was found on CT. A possible cause for epistaxis was found in all RE patients, but only in 5/252 (1.9%) patients with SE. Most tumours (10/11) and inflammatory conditions (9/10) were found in patients with RE. In three SE cases, a tumour was suspected on CT, from which two suspicions were refuted during rhinoscopy. CT revealed 10 cases of inflammatory conditions of the sinus and anatomical variant as potential cause of bleeding.CONCLUSION: For patients with unknown causes of epistaxis, supplementary CT imaging may be a useful diagnostic add-on to rhinoscopy in the event of RE, tumour suspicion or inflammation of the paranasal sinuses. However, in most cases of first-time SE, CT does not necessarily add to the diagnosis. In these cases, the marginal benefit of CT needs to be weighed carefully against its risks.",
author = "{van Horn}, Noel and Faizy, {Tobias Djamsched} and Schoenfeld, {Michael Hinrich} and Patrick Kohlmann and Gabriel Broocks and Pascal Haag and Jens Fiehler and Habermann, {Christian Richard} and Murat Karul",
year = "2019",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0220380",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "e0220380",
journal = "PLOS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Computed tomography findings in patients with primarily unknown causes of severe or recurrent epistaxis

AU - van Horn, Noel

AU - Faizy, Tobias Djamsched

AU - Schoenfeld, Michael Hinrich

AU - Kohlmann, Patrick

AU - Broocks, Gabriel

AU - Haag, Pascal

AU - Fiehler, Jens

AU - Habermann, Christian Richard

AU - Karul, Murat

PY - 2019/8/1

Y1 - 2019/8/1

N2 - OBJECTIVE: In addition to rhinoscopy, computed tomography of paranasal sinuses (CT) may be performed on patients with primary unknown cause of severe epistaxis (SE) or recurrent epistaxis (RE) to further assess the potential cause of bleeding. The aim of this study was to evaluate CT findings during the work-up of intractable epistaxis patients.METHODS: 6937 patients were treated in our emergency department with acute epistaxis between 2009-2018. 304/6937 patients underwent CT and rhinoscopy due to intractable SE or RE. 33 patients presented with head trauma prior to epistaxis and were excluded from the final analysis. In 271 cases the primary causes of SE (n = 252) or RE (n = 19) remained unknown. Two observers retrospectively evaluated CT scans for potential sources of epistaxis. Disagreement was settled by consensus. CT and rhinoscopy findings were compared.RESULTS: In 247/271 (91.1%) SE patients no related pathology was found on CT. A possible cause for epistaxis was found in all RE patients, but only in 5/252 (1.9%) patients with SE. Most tumours (10/11) and inflammatory conditions (9/10) were found in patients with RE. In three SE cases, a tumour was suspected on CT, from which two suspicions were refuted during rhinoscopy. CT revealed 10 cases of inflammatory conditions of the sinus and anatomical variant as potential cause of bleeding.CONCLUSION: For patients with unknown causes of epistaxis, supplementary CT imaging may be a useful diagnostic add-on to rhinoscopy in the event of RE, tumour suspicion or inflammation of the paranasal sinuses. However, in most cases of first-time SE, CT does not necessarily add to the diagnosis. In these cases, the marginal benefit of CT needs to be weighed carefully against its risks.

AB - OBJECTIVE: In addition to rhinoscopy, computed tomography of paranasal sinuses (CT) may be performed on patients with primary unknown cause of severe epistaxis (SE) or recurrent epistaxis (RE) to further assess the potential cause of bleeding. The aim of this study was to evaluate CT findings during the work-up of intractable epistaxis patients.METHODS: 6937 patients were treated in our emergency department with acute epistaxis between 2009-2018. 304/6937 patients underwent CT and rhinoscopy due to intractable SE or RE. 33 patients presented with head trauma prior to epistaxis and were excluded from the final analysis. In 271 cases the primary causes of SE (n = 252) or RE (n = 19) remained unknown. Two observers retrospectively evaluated CT scans for potential sources of epistaxis. Disagreement was settled by consensus. CT and rhinoscopy findings were compared.RESULTS: In 247/271 (91.1%) SE patients no related pathology was found on CT. A possible cause for epistaxis was found in all RE patients, but only in 5/252 (1.9%) patients with SE. Most tumours (10/11) and inflammatory conditions (9/10) were found in patients with RE. In three SE cases, a tumour was suspected on CT, from which two suspicions were refuted during rhinoscopy. CT revealed 10 cases of inflammatory conditions of the sinus and anatomical variant as potential cause of bleeding.CONCLUSION: For patients with unknown causes of epistaxis, supplementary CT imaging may be a useful diagnostic add-on to rhinoscopy in the event of RE, tumour suspicion or inflammation of the paranasal sinuses. However, in most cases of first-time SE, CT does not necessarily add to the diagnosis. In these cases, the marginal benefit of CT needs to be weighed carefully against its risks.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0220380

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0220380

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 31369603

VL - 14

SP - e0220380

JO - PLOS ONE

JF - PLOS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 8

ER -