â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Epistaxis (nosebleeds) is a common clinical presentation, most commonly originating from a highly vascularized anatomical zone in the anterior nasal septum.
â– ANASTOMOTIC VASCULAR CHANNELS:
1. Kiesselbach's Plexus: A highly dense, planar arterial network located in the anterior-inferior quadrant of the nasal septum, also termed Little's Area.
2. Five Arterial Inlets:
- Anterior Ethmoidal Artery (from the Ophthalmic/Internal Carotid).
- Posterior Ethmoidal Artery (from the Ophthalmic/Internal Carotid).
- Sphenopalatine Artery (terminal branch of the Maxillary/External Carotid).
- Greater Palatine Artery (from the Maxillary/External Carotid).
- Septal Branch of the Superior Labial Artery (from the Facial/External Carotid).
3. Mucosal Vulnerability: The mucosa overlying Kiesselbach's plexus is exceptionally thin and superficial, leaving the vessels unprotected.
â– CLINICAL DIAGNOSTIC METRICS:
Establishing a definitive diagnosis requires combining serum biomarkers with gold-standard diagnostic modalities. High-sensitivity ELISAs are used initially to minimize false negatives, followed by highly specific confirmatory testing.
â– DIAGNOSTIC FLOW ALGORITHM:
When initial screening yields ambiguous results, utilize highly discrete confirmatory assays or magnetic imaging sweeps to establish structural parameters.
[HY-BOARD-1262]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
Kiesselbach's Plexus is the site of over 90% of all anterior pediatric and adult epistaxis. Bleeding is triggered by local trauma (nose picking), low environmental humidity, or mucosal dry cracks. It is managed with direct compression, anterior nasal packaging, or localization and chemical cautery with silver nitrate. Always correlate elevated serum spikes with continuous vital readings to rule out false laboratory spikes. Avoid premature diagnostic closure before reviewing all essential imaging planes.