Abstract
The relation between general experimental pain sensitivity and the clinical expression of post-lumbar puncture syndrome (PLPS) was examined in a prospective double-blind study of patients who underwent a lumbar puncture with a 20-gauge spinal needle. In 44 neurology patients randomized pain was induced on the middle phalanges of fingers II-IV of both hands using a tension device on the day before lumbar puncture. Pain intensity was measured using the category sub-dividing procedure. The correspondence between experimental pain stimuli and induced pain intensities could best be described by a logarithmic function. PLPS symptoms were documented in a multi-dimensional quantitative fashion using various scales. Pronounced position-dependent headache occurred in 31% of the patients. There proved to be very significant effects of experimental pain sensitivity on intensity and duration of position-dependent headaches, as well as on vegetative symptoms of PLPS (P less than or equal to 0.01). The results provide an explanation for the varying interindividual manifestation of PLPS symptoms, in addition to factors already identified such as the size of needle used in individual patients.