Postdural Puncture Headache Clinical Trial
Official title:
Lumbar Spine Ultrasound of Patients With Previous Accidental Dural Puncture During Labour Epidural
Accidental dural puncture is a potential complication of epidural analgesia for labour and delivery. When it happens, it may cause debilitating headaches and other symptoms that prevent mothers from talking care of their newborns. Accidental dural puncture is related to the operator performance and to individual anatomical variations of the spine. The purpose of this study is to do a lumbar spine ultrasound on the patients who have had accidental dural punctures and analyze if there is any abnormal anatomy seen. Then, we will compare the position of any spinal abnormality to the position of the dural puncture reported in the anaesthesia record.
Effective epidural analgesia depends on accurate identification of the epidural space for
delivery of analgesic mixtures. The technique of loss of resistance to either saline or air
is the most commonly used method to locate the epidural space. Although this technique has a
high success rate, it is associated with a significant incidence of accidental dural
punctures. Accidental dural punctures might be related to the operator performance or to
individual anatomical variations.
A normal ligamentum flavum is fundamental in the loss of resistance technique. However, many
cadaver dissection and radiological studies in the literature have showed that the
ligamentum flavum may in fact not fuse at the midline; thereby leaving a gap between its
left and right portions. Ligamentum flavum midline gaps are thought to be a potential cause
of failed recognition of loss of resistance during epidural needle placement and
consequently accidental dural puncture. Therefore, if it were feasible to avoid inserting
the epidural needle at the same level where a ligamentum flavum midline gap exists, then
dural punctures may be less likely.
Lumbar spine ultrasound has been very useful in consistently identifying important
anatomical landmarks for epidural needle placement including the ligamentum flavum. It is
unknown at this time whether ultrasound is a useful modality to detect abnormal anatomy. Our
study will evaluate by ultrasound scan the lumbar vertebral column of patients who have had
a previously recognized accidental dural puncture. Our objective is to determine whether or
not there is a correlation between accidental dural punctures and abnormalities of
ligamentum flavum as seen by ultrasound imaging. Our hypothesis is that patients who have
had accidental dural punctures have abnormal anatomy of ligamentum flavum that can be
detected by lumbar spine ultrasound.
Lumbar ultrasound imaging from L1-S1 will be performed with the patient in the sitting
position. The best possible image captured at the transverse approach for each of the
interspaces from L5-S1 to L1-L2 will be saved for analysis of both ligamentum flavum
(primary outcome) and symmetry (secondary outcome). A normal ligamentum flavum is described
as a hyperechoic continuous midline band, which is aligned with the hyperechoic signal of
the transverse processes. An abnormal ligamentum flavum will be described as a
non-continuous or even absent signal. The presence of symmetric anatomy is defined as an
equal distant between the left and right articular processes and the transverse processes to
the midline.
Incidence of abnormal ligamentum flavum and asymmetry will be presented in a descriptive way
and the level of anatomical abnormality detected by ultrasound will be correlated to the
level of dural puncture reported on the anaesthesia record.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Retrospective
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