Title: PostDural Puncture Headache
1Post-Dural Puncture Headache
- Dmitry Portnoy, MD
- Anesthesiology Department
- UTMB
2First PDPH experienced and described
- Dr. August Bier in 1898 who stated
- All these symptoms ( pressure in the head,
dizziness ) dissappeared as soon as I lay down
horizontally, but they returned when I arose - MacRobert RG The cause of lumbar puncture
headache. J Am Med Assoc 1918 701350
3Pathophysiology CNS and CSF
- CSF production - 500 ml/day to maintain 150 ml.
- CSF pressure from 5 to 15 cm H20
- up to 40 cm in upright position
- CSF leakage (higher in upright position)
- Pressure gradient increased
- Traction on and stretching
- pain-sensitive structures
4Pathophysiology Independent Factors
- Gender ( female gtgt male)
- Pregnancy
- Age ( decreased incidence with increasing age)
- Psychosomatic component
- Needle size and design
- Technique of needle insertion
- Previous history of PDPH
5Clinical presentation of PDPH
- Postural nature of the headache is the hallmark.
- Throbbing pain in frontal or occipital areas.
- Onset typically within 24 to 48 hours.
- Associated symptoms
- neck stiffness and scapular pain
- nausea, vomiting, vertigo, dizziness
- photophobia, diplopia
- hearing loss, tinnitus
6Clinical presentation of PDPH Severity
- Mild PDPH (VAS score 1 - 3)
- slight restriction of daily activities
- the patient is not bedridden, no associated
symptoms - Moderate PDPH (VAS score 4-7)
- significant restriction of daily activities
- the patient is bedridden part of the day
- associated symptoms may or may not be present
- Severe PDPH (VAS score 8-10)
- incapacitating headache, impossible to sit up
- associated symptoms are always present
7Differential Diagnosis
- Migraine, tension headache.
- 39 have HA during first week (unrelated to
anesthesia) - previous or family history of migraine
- Chronic and pregnancy related hypertension.
- Infectious disease (e.g. sinusitis, meningitis).
- Intracranial pathology (space-occupying mass).
- Dural venous sinus thrombosis, pneumocephalus.
- Caffeine withdrawal headache.
- Spontaneous intracranial hypotension
8Postpartum headache and seizures in 16 y/o
patient
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11Confirmatory signs of peridural vs. dural
puncture
- A. Respiratory sign ( rate and depth with
epidural) - B. Sensory distribution
- C. Fluids out of epidural needle
- 1. Aspiration test
- 2. Quality and quantity of aspirate
- 3. The forearm test
- 4. STP test
- 5. Analysis of aspirate
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14Sequence of events
- 10/12 - SVD with LEA associated dural puncture.
- 10/13 - Moderate PDPH, blood patch using LEC with
complete resolution of headache. - 10/14 - Discharged home in good condition.
- 10/16 - Readmitted for HA, N/V.
- 10/16 -10/18 - multiple anesthesiology consults.
BP ranging from 120-150/70-90 to 170/90-100 - 10/18 - Analgesics, hydration, caffeine infusion
(500 mg.) - 10/18 - Worsening HA, disoriented, tonic-clonic
seizures - 10/18 - 10/27 Tm with Magnesium, Dilantin,
analgesics. Gradual and steady
improvement - 10/27 - Discharged home in good condition.
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17Clinical Presentation of Women Readmitted With
Postpartum Severe Preeclampsia or Eclampsia.
- (Jana L. Atterbury, JOGNN, 27, 134 141, 1997)
- May present up to 13 days pospartum.
- Generalized HA, HTN, malaise.
- Visual changes and/or GI symptoms may represent
signs of impending severe HTN. - Normal laboratory values.
18Case Reports in the Literature
- Postpartum Seizure after Epidural Blood Patch and
IV Caffeine Sodium Bensoate - Bolton V.E. et al. Anesthesiology 70146-149,
1989 - Epidural Blood Patch and Late Postpartum
Eclampsia - Frison L.M. Anesth and Analg 1996 82666-8
- Puerperal Seizures After Post-Dural Puncture
Headache - Shearer, V Obstet Gynecol 1995 85255-66
19Needles, Technique and Dural Puncture
- Epidural needles - cutting (Tuohy, Hustead,
Weiss). - Spinal needles - small-bore
- cutting (Quincke)
- pencil-point (Whitacre,Sprotte etc.)
- Smaller size - less incidence of PDPH.
- Human factor.
- Rotation of the needle.
- Median vs. paramedian approach.
20Needles, Technique and Dural Puncture
Dr.Hatfalvi hypothesis of PDPH
- Based on 4465 spinals with 20 g Quincke needle.
- Perpendicular puncture
- creates bi-directional valve.
- Tangential puncture with
- bevel facing the dura
- creates self-healing
- hole in the dura.
21Needles, Technique and Dural Puncture
Dr.Hatfalvi hypothesis of PDPH
- Inevitable bending and deflection of needles.
- The longer the distance and stiffer tissue, the
greater deflection. - 20 gauge Quincke 26 gauge
Quincke
22Prevention of PDPH
- Best needle selection incidence vs. technical
failure. - Orientation of the needle bevel (Quincke-type).
- Prophylactic blood patch - effective, but has
risks. - Bed rest - no predictable pattern.
- Volume therapy - no convincing evidence.
- Local anesthetic - choice and concentration.
- Skin-prep removal.
23Treatment of PDPH
- Usually self-limiting with duration of a few
days. - Position bed rest.
- Analgesics NSAID, systemic opioids very rare.
- Caffeine.
- Epidural infusion therapy.
- Epidural blood patch.
24Epidural blood patch
- First reported and suggested by Dr. Cormley in
1960. - Strictly sterile fashion, at or below original
puncture. - Blood volume 15 to 20 ml unless pain or
discomfort. - Optimal timing 24 hr after the puncture (?)
- Complications and side effects
- transient parasthesias
- back stiffness, backache, pain in the neck
- acute aseptic meningitis
- subdural hematoma
25Conclusion
- PDPH is entirely iatrogenic complication of
neuroaxial technique. - It is common, relatively benign and effectively
curable. - Not all wet taps lead to PDPH.
- Postpartum HA may present a great diagnostic
challenge. - multifactorial by origin and mechanism
- post hoc ergo procter hoc
- meticulous H P is the key for diagnosis
- The risk is decreased by proper technique and
optimal needles. - Conservative therapy should proceed EBP.
- EBP is safe and effective treatment of PDPH.
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