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Nick Kyrgios motors into Open second round

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Stars coming out to play on Day 4 of Australian Open (1:48)

Steph Brantz and Mary Joe Fernandez preview the top storylines of Day 4 of the Australian Open. (1:48)

Nick Kyrgios has breezed and sneezed his way through to the Australian Open second round at Melbourne Park.

Australia's 14th seed and No.1 title hope ignored lingering knee pain to record a comprehensive 6-1 6-2 6-2 victory over Gastao Elias at Hisense Arena on Monday night.

Kyrgios's biggest concern wasn't a knee injury he carried into the season-opening grand slam but a recurrence of nose bleeds that required medical time-out early in the second set.

The 21-year-old winced in pain after receiving treatment from the tournament trainer but showed no ill-effects as he brushed past Portugal's world No.81 for the loss of only five games.

"They put some wood in there," Kyrgios said.

"I've always had a problem with blood noses. I've got bad sinuses, so I get that a lot.

"I don't know what it is but it makes me sneeze. It's okay - it helps and it stops the bleeding."

Nose bleeds aside, Kyrgios revelled in his return to Hisense Arena.

He took the opening set in just 19 minutes, was up two sets in barely half an hour and wrapped up the match like a man trying make a nine o'clock flick.

"The crowd was awesome today and that's why I request this court, cause it's my favourite court. I love getting here," Kyrgios said.

The rapid-fire win was the perfect start for Kyrgios, the 2013 Open boys' champion, 2015 men's quarter-finalist and bonafide title contender in 2017.

"I can feel it (the knee), I've had great treatment for it with a great team that's been helping me manage it," Kyrgios said.

"I've done everything I can and I played all right tonight so hopefully we can keep that going."

Next up for Kyrgios on Wednesday is Andreas Seppi, the Italian he beat at the same stage two years ago en route to the last 16.