The Marshall Protocol Study Site Home

Search
   
Members

Calendar

Help

Home
Search by username
   Not logged in - Login | Register 


What can I do for my nosebleeds?
 Moderated by: Dr Trevor Marshall  

New Topic

Reply

Print
AuthorPost
Aussie Barb
Research Team


Joined: Thu Jul 22nd, 2004
Location: Australia
Posts: 19546
Status:  Offline
 Posted: Fri Jun 30th, 2006 08:39

Quote

Reply
What can I do for my nosebleeds?


Causes

This article notes that systemic disease can cause nosebleeds. Nosebleeds may be due to inflammation and exacerbated by immune system response.

Treatment

-Stay calm.

-Sit down and lean slightly forward.

-Keep your head above your heart.

-Lean forward so the blood will drain out of your nose instead of down the back of your throat. If you lean back, you may swallow the blood. This can cause nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.

-Use your thumb and index finger to squeeze together the soft portion of your nose. This area is located between the end of your nose and the hard, bony ridge that forms the bridge of your nose. Keep holding your nose until the bleeding stops. Don't let go for at least 5 minutes. If it's still bleeding, hold it again for 10 minutes straight.

-Place a cold compress or an ice pack across the bridge of your nose and/or the back of your neck.

-Don't do anything that may make bleeding start again, such as bending over or blowing your nose for at least 48 hours.

-Doc may need to cauterize a leaking blood vessel if the bleeding cannot be stopped.

-Doc may want to check your coagulation time if nosebleed repeats.

See How to treat a nosebleed at this link and this link.


Prevention

-Use a humidifier with your oxygen and/or your cpap machine.

-Apply a water-based ointment (Ayr is one OTC brand) to the inside of your nose with a Q-tip to keep it moist.
-Do not blow your nose vigorously.

-Do not pick your nose.

-Increase the humidity of your home.

-Do not take aspirin, Vit E or essential fatty acids or any other OTC medications that might thin your blood.

-Vit K may be needed if you are deficient (deficiency in adults is rare). 



____________________
Barb: Dx Inflammatory Disease Endocrine Imbalance 2003| Depression| 24+ years not Dx| MP Aug04| ABC of MP| MP Search|

 Current time is 18:47



* We can help you understand chronic disease, but only your physician is licensed to give you medical care *
Always consult your physician before commencing or changing any treatment he/she has prescribed for you

Powered by WowBB 1.7 - Entire site Copyright © 2004-2007 Autoimmunity Research Foundation, All Rights Reserved
Click here to view our PRIVACY POLICY
Page processed in 0.1092 seconds (28% database + 72% PHP). 18 queries executed.