Introduction: Lumbar puncture (LP) is a widely used diagnostic method in patients of all ages. Blood-contaminated cerebrospinal fluid samples are frequent and may compromise diagnostic accuracy.
Objectives: We determined age-specific incidences of traumatic LPs (TLPs) in adults and examined factors that accounted for the incidence of TLPs.
Methods: Erythrocyte count data from 15,812 LP procedures (2,404 were performed twice) were collected from hospital records of patients aged from 18 to 104 years. The incidence of TLPs in a patient's second LP procedure was evaluated with logistic regression analysis using the first LP, the time between the procedures and age as predictors.
Results: The incidence of TLP in the second procedure was at least double that in the first procedure. If the first procedure was traumatic, the odds ratio of a TLP in the second procedure was 7-40-fold. One day between the successive procedures was associated with an over 10-fold odds ratio increase of TLP, and a week was still 4-8-fold odds ratio increase. Age was also associated with the incidence of TLP.
Conclusions: Two factors (a week or less between a patient's two LP procedures or a traumatic first LP) multiply the odds of the second procedure being traumatic and contribute to whether a patient's following LP procedure is successful.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11046507 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.7861/clinmed.2022-0169 | DOI Listing |
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