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Your packing will stay in place for a time agreed upon with your healthcare provider. Typically, it should be in place for no longer than five days. Other things that may determine how long the packing will stay in include how heavy the nosebleed is, where the nosebleed is, certain underlying medical conditions, and your comfort. If your packing is resorbable, it may not need removal and it will go away with time and the use of nasal saline (saltwater) sprays.
Nasal packing takes up space in your nose and lessens the airflow into your nose, making it harder to breathe through your nose. It can also block your sinuses from draining and block the flow of your tears into the nose. You may feel like you have a cold while the packing is in place. You may have a stuffy nose, decreased ability to smell, pressure around your face, headaches, runny nose, and tearing from the eyes.
Yes, if pressure from the packing is not able to reach the area of bleeding in the nose, bleeding can happen. If this happens, pinch the soft part of the nose. If bleeding continues or becomes heavier, call your healthcare provider, or go to the emergency department.
If you are given non-resorbable packing (packing that does not dissolve), leaving the packing in past the time recommended by your healthcare provider can cause possible complications. It is important to stick to the exact follow-up directions from your healthcare provider.
Packing is a foreign object that can allow the growth of bacteria in the nose. There is a low risk of infection spreading to the nose and sinuses or, in extremely rare cases, throughout the body. The packing also provides pressure inside the nose. This may lower blood flow to areas of the nose and result in injury. Septal perforations (hole in the partition dividing the right and left nasal cavity) and scarring in the nasal cavity can form after the packing is removed. If the packing is held with clips at the nasal opening, pressure sores of the outside skin can form over time and result in scarring. Packing blocks airflow into the nose, making it harder to breathe through your nose, and can interrupt sleep at night, which can contribute to or worsen obstructive sleep apnea.
In some cases, your healthcare provider will prescribe oral antibiotics if the risk for infection is high. Antibiotics, while generally safe, do have some risks, including allergic reactions and gastrointestinal (stomach) problems. You should discuss the risks and benefits of antibiotics with your healthcare provider. Keeping the nose and packing moist with nasal saline (saltwater) sprays throughout the day can reduce dry crusting and help resorbable packing melt away. There should be fewer chances of complications if you follow the exact follow-up instructions from your healthcare provider.
To avoid increased blood flow to the nose and risk of further bleeding, you should avoid straining, lifting over 10 pounds, bending over, and exercising. Sleeping with the head slightly higher may also help. Walking and other light activity is allowed. Unless otherwise told by your healthcare provider, avoid over-the-counter pain medicine that may increase bleeding, including aspirin and ibuprofen. Acetaminophen (Tylenol) does not increase bleeding and can be used. In general, you should not try to blow your nose if you have packing in place. If you feel the need to sneeze, sneeze with your mouth open.
You should call your healthcare provider with any of the following: return of blood from the nose or mouth, fever over 101 degrees Fahrenheit, increasing pain, vision changes, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, loss of color around the skin of the nose, swelling of the face, or a diffuse (spreading) skin rash.
You should talk about this with your healthcare provider at the time the packing is placed.
You may at first have some small amount of bleeding from the raw areas inside your nose. Keeping the nose moist with saline (saltwater) spray and moisturizing agents (like petroleum jelly and antibiotic ointments) will prevent dry crusts and help with healing. In some cases, nosebleeds may happen again, and additional treatment may be needed. If this happens, pinch the soft part of the nose and consider the use of nasal sprays like oxymetazoline (pronounced ok-see-muh-taz-uh-leen) or phenylephrine (pronounced fen-l-ef-reen), which can help slow nosebleeds. If bleeding continues, call your healthcare provider or go to the emergency department.
Source
Tunkel DE, Anne S, Payne SC, et al. Clinical practice guideline: nosebleed (epistaxis). Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2020;162(1_Suppl):S1-S38.
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