Cocaine versus xylometazoline to prevent epistaxis after nasotracheal intubation: A randomized trial

Author:

Larsen Mo H.12ORCID,Rosenkrantz Oscar3ORCID,Creuzburg Andreas12ORCID,Kristensen Michael S.1ORCID,Rasmussen Lars S.4ORCID,Isbye Dan12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anaesthesiology, Centre of Head and Orthopaedics Rigshospitalet Copenhagen University Hospital Copenhagen Denmark

2. University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

3. Department of Clinical Epidemiology Aarhus University & Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus Denmark

4. Danish Ministry of Defence Personnel Agency Ballerup Denmark

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundNasotracheal intubation is associated with a risk of epistaxis. Several drugs, including cocaine and xylometazoline may be used as decongestants prior to nasotracheal intubation to prevent this. We hypothesized that xylometazoline would prevent epistaxis more effectively than cocaine, demonstrated by a lower proportion of patients with bleeding after nasotracheal intubation.MethodsWe conducted a single‐center, outcome assessor and analyst‐blinded, clinical randomized controlled trial following approval from the local research ethics committee and the national medicine agency. Written informed consent was obtained from all patients. Patients scheduled for surgery under general anesthesia with nasotracheal intubation were randomized to receive either 2 mL 4% cocaine or 2 mL 0.05% xylometazoline prior to nasotracheal intubation. Immediately following intubation, epistaxis was evaluated by the blinded intubating anesthetist on a four‐point scale. We measured heart rate and blood pressure the first 5 min after drug administration. Adverse events were followed up after 24 h.ResultsA total of 53 patients received cocaine and 49 patients received xylometazoline. Bleeding occurred in 32 patients receiving cocaine (60.4%) and in 34 patients receiving xylometazoline (69.4%) (p = .41, Fisher's exact test) with a difference of 9.0% (95% CI: −9.4% to 27%). There was no statistically significant difference between groups regarding the heart rate or blood pressure. No adverse cardiac events were recorded in either group.ConclusionWe found no statistically significant difference between cocaine and xylometazoline in preventing epistaxis after nasotracheal intubation, and the choice of vasoconstrictor should be based on other considerations, such as pricing, availability and medicolegal issues.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference37 articles.

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5. Anaesthesia for rhinological surgery;Murdoch I;BJA Educ,2021

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