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Nasal fracture
From WikEM
Contents
Background
- Always assess for associated head, face, and neck injuries
Clinical Features
- Nasal deformity, bony crepitus
- Profuse epistaxis
- Periorbital ecchymosis in the absence of other findings of orbital injury
Differential Diagnosis
Maxillofacial Trauma
- Le Fort fractures
- Skull fracture (peds)
- Auricular hematoma
- Nasal fracture
- Zygomatic arch fracture
- Zygomaticomaxillary (tripod) fracture
- Dental trauma
- Mandible fracture
Orbital trauma
Acute
- Ruptured Globe^
- Corneal Abrasion
- Ocular foreign body
- Conjunctival laceration
- Caustic Keratoconjunctivitis^^
- Subconjunctival hemorrhage
- Traumatic iritis
- Traumatic hyphema
- Retinal detachment
- Retrobulbar hemorrhage/hematoma
- Traumatic mydriasis
- Orbital fracture
- Frontal sinus fracture
- Naso-ethmoid fracture
- Inferior orbial wall fracture
- Medial orbital wall fracture
Subacute/Delayed
Evaluation
- Clinical diagnosis (imaging rarely needed)
Management
Most nasal fractures do not require immediate intervention
- Exclude other associated traumatic injuries
- Treat septal hematoma if present
- Immediately incise and drain
- Consider ED reduction (only if patient presents before significant swelling has occurred)
- Anesthesia
- Place lidocaine soaked cotton pledgets for 5 minutes
- Inject local anesthetic
- Perform infraorbital and supraorbital nerve block if needed
- Reduction
- Insert elevator until contact is made with the depressed nasal bone
- Lift depressed nasal bone anteriorly and laterally in one fluid motion
- Use external splinting and/or nasal packing to maintain alignment
- Anesthesia
Disposition
- Outpatient
- Refer to ENT within 6-10 days regardless of whether perform reduction or not
- No nose blowing