Journal of the neurological sciences
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The pathophysiology of lumbar puncture headache (LPH) is still unclear. There is evidence that leakage of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leads to CSF hypotension, which causes dilation of intracranial veins, resulting in LPH. However, CSF leaks at the skull base are not associated with orthostatic headache; there is poor correlation between recumbent CSF pressure and LPH; and there has been no satisfactory explanation of how venous dilation causes orthostatic headache. ⋯ We are, thus, able to explain the orthostatic character of LPH, the fact that spinal but not cranial sites of leakage produce orthostatic headache and the imperfect correlations both between recumbent CSF pressure and LPH and between reduced CSF volume and LPH. The near absence of LPH in the very young and in the elderly relates to the relative stiffness of the epidural space at these ages. Epidural injections of blood or saline give immediate relief by reducing epidural distensibility.
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Suramin is being used either alone, or in combination with other chemotherapeutic agents, in the treatment of hormone-refractory or metastatic prostate cancer. Use of this potentially valuable chemotherapy is limited by a dose-dependent polyneuropathy. It has been difficult in human studies to characterize peripheral suramin toxicity separately from cancer-related neuropathy. ⋯ With TEM, there were abundant characteristic lysosomal inclusion bodies in DRG and Schwann cells. Electrophysiological and histological evidence of peripheral demyelination was rare, being observed in only one animal. Suramin induced a length, dose and time-dependent axonal sensorimotor polyneuropathy associated with axonal degeneration, atrophy, and accumulation of glycolipid lysosomal inclusions.