• Acad Emerg Med · Jan 2001

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    The effect of lower-extremity position on cerebrospinal fluid pressures.

    • K L Abbrescia, T A Brabson, W C Dalsey, J J Kelly, J L Kaplan, T M Young, D Jenkins, J Chu, M S Emery, and Lumbar Puncture Study Group.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA 19141, USA.
    • Acad Emerg Med. 2001 Jan 1; 8 (1): 8-12.

    ObjectiveTo determine the effects of lower-extremity positioning on cerebrospinal fluid opening pressure (CSFp). The authors believed that during lumbar puncture (LP), CSFp does not meaningfully decrease when the lower extremities are extended from flexion, as is often suggested.MethodsIn a convenience sample of adult patients who clinically required LP in an urban emergency department, three sequential CSFp measurements were obtained in either sequence A (knee, hip, and neck flexion [90 degrees ], then extension, then flexion) or sequence B (extension, flexion, then extension) prior to CSF withdrawal. The neck was flexed at 30 degrees when the lower extremities were flexed, while the thoracolumbar spine was kept in the neutral position for all measurements.ResultsNineteen patients were studied in each sequence. Although variable, overall within-patient changes between positions were not clinically meaningful. Mean and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) for the decrease in CSFp from position 1 to position 3 (same position) were 0.2 cm H(2)O (1.7%) and 0.9 to -0.6 cm H(2)O (6% to -2.7%), respectively. Changing from flexion to extension decreased pressure measurements by a mean of 0.9 cm H(2)O (2.5%) [95% CI = 2.1 to -0.1 cm H(2)O (7.6% to -2.4%)]. Changing from extension to flexion increased CSFp by a mean of 1.1 cm H(2)O (6.1%) [95% CI = 0.2 to 2.0 cm H(2)O (1.3% to 11.5%)], a statistically but not clinically meaningful change.ConclusionsChanging lower-extremity position did not meaningfully change mean CSFp. These data do not support the common suggestion that extending the lower extremities during LP meaningfully decreases CSF opening pressures.

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