Lumbar puncture
From IDWiki
Contraindications
- Increased intracranial pressure, with focal neurological deficits, new seizures, or papilledema
- Infection at the procedure site
- Coagulopathy
- Platelets <30
- INR >1.6
- Hemophilia
- Anticoagulation
Procedure
- Position appropriately: lateral decubitus or sitting and leaning over a table
- Landmark using posterior superior iliac crests (PSIS) (marks L4)
- Can go above (L4/L5 space) or below (L3/L4 space)
- Inset spinal needle in the midline
- Measure opening pressure
Investigations
- Consider INR/PTT if concern about coagulopathy
- Consider platelet count (should be >100)
- Consider CT head
Complications
- Local pain
- Post-LP headache, better when supine
- Treat with caffeine, fluids, and acetaminophen
- Brief radicular pain
- Rare:
- Spinal epidural hematoma
- Bacterial meningitis or spinal abscess
- Cerebral herniation
Interpretation
Etiology | Gram stain | Cell count | CSF glucose | CSF protein |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bacterial meningitis | Positive in 60-80% | Elevated >1000 neutrophils | Reduced <0.4 CSF:serum | Elevated >1g/L |
Viral meningitis | Negative | Moderate elevation <100 lymphocytes | Normal or mildly reduced | Normal or mildly elevated |
Fungal or tuberculous meningitis | Negative, except for Cryptococcus on India ink or TB on acid-fast stain | Moderate elevation, usually lymphocytes | Often very low | Elevated |
- Correction for a bloody tap is 1 excess WBC for every 700 RBCs
- Lymphocytosis may be seen in bacterial meningitis if Listeria infection or prior antibiotics
- Xanthochromia suggests subarachnoid hemorrhage
- Hypoglycorrhachia refers to low CSF glucose
CSF After Antibiotics
- Glucose increases first, then protein, and both are often normalized within 12 hours
- WBC normalizes last, and can still be useful even the following day
Further Reading
- Straus S, et al. How Do I Perform a Lumbar Puncture and Analyze the Results to Diagnose Bacterial Meningitis? JAMA. 2006;296(16):2012-2022.