La Revue de médecine interne
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About 30% of lumbar punctures are complicated by the lumbar puncture syndrome the main symptom of which is a characteristically posture-dependent headache (the so-called "spinal headache"), sometimes accompanied by nausea, vomiting and stiff neck. The syndrome usually begins in the days which follow lumbar puncture and subsides within 10 days. ⋯ The epidural blood patch technique is seldom used. Prevention relies entirely on the use of small calibre lumbar puncture needles; keeping the patient lying supine after the puncture is a classical recommendation, but its preventive value has not yet been fully demonstrated.
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Risk factors were analyzed in a group of 117 blood donors seropositive for hepatitis C virus antibody. One risk factor, at least, was found in 63 (53.8%) subjects. ⋯ Our study emphasizes the high percutaneous transmission of hepatitis C in contrast with the low sexual transmission. No risk factor could be found in 54 (46.2%) of the 117 seropositive subjects: the route of transmission in these cases is an intriguing issue which certainly deserves further epidemiological investigations.