| Literature DB >> 32095469 |
Wonsuk Shin1, Min-Kyoung Kim1,2, Jinkwon Kim3, Min-Hee Woo3, Doo-Yeon Cho1, Kyoung Soo Lim1.
Abstract
A lumbar puncture can be used to measure the concentrations of drugs and/or pharmacodynamic biomarkers during clinical trials of central nervous system drugs. We report a case of a post lumbar puncture headache (PLPH) in a first-in-human study, which was reported as a serious adverse event. A 20-year-old man received 200 mg of the investigational product (IP) for 7 days and underwent a lumbar puncture for cerebrospinal fluid sampling before IP administration (Day 1, pre-dose) and after 7 days and multiple IP administrations (Day 7, 1 hour post-dose). After discharge on Day 8, the subject complained of headache, nausea, vomiting, neck stiffness, and numbness of the extremities. The symptoms occurred when he got up and disappeared after he remained in the supine position for several minutes. Five days later, he visited the neurology clinic of the main hospital. The neurologist recommended hospitalization for further evaluation and symptom management, and the subject was then admitted to the hospital. There were no abnormal findings in vital signs, laboratory results, or brain-computed tomography. His symptoms disappeared during the hospitalization period. It was important to distinguish whether the headache was IP-related or lumbar puncture-related. Therefore, knowledge of clinical characteristics and differential diagnosis of PLPH is paramount. Furthermore, if severe PLPH occurs, a consultation with a neurologist and imaging studies should be considered for a differential diagnosis of PLPH.Entities:
Keywords: First-in-human; Lumbar puncture; Post lumbar puncture headache; Serious adverse event
Year: 2017 PMID: 32095469 PMCID: PMC7033405 DOI: 10.12793/tcp.2017.25.4.162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 2289-0882
Figure 1Brain CT of the subject showing no abnormal finding.
Differential diagnosis of headache after lumbar puncture
| 1. Nonspecifi headache |
| 2. Migraine |
| 3. Caffeine-withdrawal headache |
| 4. Meningitis |
| 5. Sinus headache |
| 6. Pregnancy-induced hypertension (pre-eclampsia) |
| 7. Drugs (cocaine, amphetamine) |
| 8. Pneumocephalus-related headache |
| 9. Cerebral venous thrombosis |
| 10. Subdural hematoma |
| 11. Subarachnoid hematoma |
| 12. Brain tumor |
| 13. Lactation headache |
| 14. Stroke (ischemic and hemorrhagic) |
| 15. Posterior leukoencephalopathy |
Typical features of post lumbar puncture headache and potential life-threatening diseases after lumbar puncture[10]
| Post lumbar puncture headache | Throbbing fronto-occipital headache, relieved by lying down, interscapular pain, nuchal rigidity, often accompanied by dizziness, nausea and vomiting, visual disturbances, photophobia and auditory symptoms, cranial nerve palsies, upper and lower limb pain |
| Meningitis | Acute occipital headache, neck stiffness, fever, photophobia |
| Cerebral tumor | Dull, deep intermittent headache, elevated intracranial pressure, drowsiness, unequal pupils, papilledema, convulsions |
| Cerebral vein thrombosis | Generalized or focal neurological symptoms and signs. Headache in 80% of cases, nausea, vomiting. Psychiatric symptoms. There may be an alteration of consciousness or cerebellar uncoordination. Other neurological signs include papilledema, focal defi or seizures. Papilledema may be associated with transient visual abnormalities, while seizures may be focal or generalized. Most defi are motor and sensory, usually unilateral, and involve mostly the lower extremities |
| Intracranial bleed - intracerebral | Sudden severe headache (‘the worst in my life’). Weakness and/or numbness of one side of the body. Slurred speech or language difficulties. Loss of vision in one or both eyes; double vision. Incoordination, unsteadiness, giddiness. Drowsiness, coma |
| Intracranial bleed - subdural | Headache from mild to severe, localized or generalized. Intermittent with slow onset, often a history of trauma. Fluctuating changes in consciousness |
| Intracranial bleed - subarachnoid | Occipital headache with sudden onset, severe, constant. Prodromal pain in one eye, ptosis, blunting of consciousness, vomiting, stiff neck |