Nosebleed and piles are common and profuse; bleeding may cause severe lack of blood.
A cotton plug soaked in alum often stops nosebleed by inserting it in the nostrils, or a solution may be thrown or snuffed into the nostrils.
The Yarrow acquired the name of Nosebleed from its having been put into the nose to cause bleeding, and to cure the megrim, as we learn from Gerarde.
The flowers of the Common Yarrow orNosebleed are white or pink; those of the Nobile are yellow.
Nosebleed Slight nosebleed does not require treatment; no harm results from it.
If nosebleed comes on at night during sleep, the blood may flow into the stomach without the patient's knowledge, and on being vomited may suggest bleeding from the stomach.
Nosebleed also is common in both full-blooded and anæmic persons; in the former because of the high pressure within the blood vessels, in the latter owing to the thin walls of the arteries and capillaries which readily rupture.
For nosebleed it is often efficient when snuffed up the nose, or when pledgets of cotton are soaked in it and placed in the nostrils.
The headache and fever, together often with occasional nosebleed and general feeling of weariness, may continue for a week or two before the patient feels sick enough to go to bed.
Nosebleed is again an accompaniment of certain general disorders, as heart disease and typhoid fever.
Nosebleed is caused by blows or falls, or more frequently by picking and violently blowing the nose.
Then "picking the nose" removes the crusts, and frequentnosebleed results.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nosebleed" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.