Causes
Clinical
features
Investigations
Immediate
management
Prevention
Prognosis
|  |  | | Investigations |
Lumbar puncture
a
Use a narrow gauge, non-cutting needle
a
through a bleb of local
anaesthetic
c
Why?
Narrow gauge needles and non-cutting needles reduce post-lumbar puncture headache
| Patient |
Treatment |
Comparison |
Outcome |
CER |
OR (95% CI) |
NNT
(95% CI) |
Adults undergoing lumbar puncture
a
|
Small gauge needle
|
Large gauge needle
|
Post-lumbar puncture headache
at
weeks
|
11%
|
0.30 (0.20 to
0.41) |
13
(12 to
16)
|
|
Adults undergoing lumbar puncture
|
Non-cutting needles
|
Cutting tip needles
|
Post-lumbar puncture headache
at
weeks
|
6.8%
|
0.50 (0.27 to
0.68) |
31
(21 to
49)
|
Note:
-
Non-cutting needles (with round tip) require an introducer needle to break the skin.
-
Back pain and failure rates do not clearly differ with small, large, cutting or non-cutting needles
d
-
A bleb of
lignocaine
does not clearly reduce a successful first lumbar puncture attempt.
c
|