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  2. Lumbar puncture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumbar_puncture

    Illustration depicting lumbar puncture (spinal tap) Spinal needles used in lumbar puncture Illustration depicting common positions for lumbar puncture procedure. The person is usually placed on their side (left more commonly than right). The patient bends the neck so the chin is close to the chest, hunches the back, and brings knees toward the ...

  3. Heinrich Quincke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinrich_Quincke

    Quincke's puncture" is a somewhat outdated eponym for lumbar puncture, [4] [5] used for the examination of the cerebrospinal fluid in numerous diseases such as meningitis and multiple sclerosis. In 1893 he described what is now known as idiopathic intracranial hypertension, which he labeled "serous meningitis". [6]

  4. Intracranial pressure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intracranial_pressure

    More commonly, decreased ICP is the result of lumbar puncture or other medical procedure involving the spinal cord. Various medical imaging technologies exist to assist in identifying the cause of decreased ICP. Often, the syndrome is self-limiting, especially if it is the result of a medical procedure. [citation needed]

  5. Queckenstedt's maneuver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queckenstedt's_maneuver

    Given normal anatomy, the intracranial pressure will be reflected as a rapidly rising pressure measured from the lumbar needle, within 10–12 seconds. If there is a stenosis in the spine, there will be a damped, delayed response in the lumbar pressure, thus a positive Queckenstedt's maneuver.

  6. CSF tap test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSF_tap_test

    The test involves removing 30–50 ml of CSF through a lumbar puncture, after which motor and cognitive function is clinically reassessed. [1] The name "Fisher test" is after C. Miller Fisher , a Canadian neurologist working in Boston, Massachusetts, who described the test.

  7. Intracranial pressure monitoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intracranial_pressure...

    Under normal conditions, regular movements such as leaning forward, normal heartbeat and breathing can cause changes to the ICP. Intracranial monitoring accounts for this by averaging measurements over 30 minutes in non-comatose patients.

  8. Myelography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myelography

    For those children with spinal cord diseases, lumbar puncture may damage the spinal cord due to possibility of tethered spinal cord syndrome where the spinal cord is located below than the usual spinal termination level. [3] Therefore, lumbar puncture should be done at the lowest position as possible for such cases. However, spinal cord injury ...

  9. Ultrasound-guided lumbar puncture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultrasound-guided_lumbar...

    Ultrasound-guided lumbar puncture is a medical procedure used in some emergency departments to obtain cerebrospinal fluid for diagnostic purposes. In contrast to standard lumbar puncture by palpation , the use of ultrasound imaging may reduce the number of failed punctures, needle insertions, and needle redirections. [ 1 ]