Title of article :
Should the lower end of the spinal cord be localized by MRI in all patients having low backache prior to spinal anesthesia?
Author/Authors :
Pang, Lei Jilin University - First Hospital - Department of Anesthesiology, China , Han, Shuhai Jilin University - First Hospital - Department of Anesthesiology, China , Wang, Yanfen Jilin University - Second Hospital - Dept of Gastroenterology, China , Lian, Xin Jilin University - First Hospital, China , Lu, Lu Jilin University - Department of Breast Surgery, China , Ma, Haichun Jilin University - First Hospital - Department of Anesthesiology, China
From page :
367
To page :
370
Abstract :
Objective: This study investigates the position of the lower end of the spinal cord conus in Chinese adults with low backache using MRI, to locate the safe puncture site for spinal anesthesia. Methodology: Eight hundreds adults suffering from low backache were included in the study. Magnetic resonance imaging was used to localize the lower end of the spinal cord conus. Results: Adult females’ conus positions were slightly lower than the males (median: L1:lower, quartile: L1:middle-L1:upper for females; median: L1:lower, quartile: L1:upper-L2 for males; P 0.001). In addition our data showed that in 23.25% of patients the tip of the conus was located at the upper 1/3 level of L3. Pearson’s correlation analysis showed that when the study population was divided by age group (Group A = 30 years of age; Group B = 30-60 years old; Group C = more than 60 years of age), cone position was significantly lower in older patients (r = 0.113, P 0.05). Conclusion: Spinal puncture should not be performed higher than the L3-L4 intervertebral space in Chinese patients having low backache unless the position of the lower end of the spinal cord is identified by prior MRI.
Keywords :
Spinal cord , Anatomy , Intraoporative complications
Journal title :
Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences
Journal title :
Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences
Record number :
2586385
Link To Document :
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