作者
Kiran T Thakur, Kondwelani Mateyo, Lottie Hachaambwa, Violet Kayamba, Macpherson Mallewa, Jane Mallewa, Ernest O Nwazor, Tope Lawal, Chindo B Mallum, Masharip Atadzhanov, David R Boulware, Gretchen L Birbeck, Omar K Siddiqi
发表日期
2015/5/12
期刊
Neurology
卷号
84
期号
19
页码范围
1988-1990
出版商
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
简介
In 1891, Winter1 described the first 4 cases of tuberculous meningitis (TBM), in which “paracenteses of the theca vertebralis was performed to relieve cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) fluid pressure.” Since this original description of the lumbar puncture (LP) procedure, neurologists worldwide have relied on LPs for both diagnostic and therapeutic purposes. In resource-limited settings, LPs are often the only neurologic test available to aid the clinician in neurologic diagnosis. In sub-Saharan Africa, a large number of patients present to hospitals with acute neurologic symptoms, including those who are HIV-infected and have opportunistic infections such as cryptococcal meningitis and TBM. In these clinical scenarios, LPs are an essential point-of-care diagnostic and therapeutic procedure.2 The benefits of the LP as a diagnostic tool are well-known, but it is important to emphasize that therapeutic LPs are a low-cost measure …
引用总数
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