Caffeine can ease a spinal tap headache
August 10, 2011 By Becky Ham in Health
People who suffer headaches after a spinal tap might have a relatively simple way to ease the painful throb: a caffeine tablet.
Postdural puncture headaches, or spinal headaches, are the most common complication of lower back punctures, lasting from a few hours to a few days. The puncture can occur intentionally when drawing a sample of cerebrospinal fluid for a diagnosis, for example or unintentionally with anesthesia or a medication injection at the lower back.
Researchers led by Xavier Basurto Ona of the Hospital de Figueres in Catalonia, Spain, now show that caffeine treatment can decrease the number of patients with persistent puncture headaches, when compared to a placebo. Both oral and intravenous caffeine work, with the IV form especially helpful in lessening the duration of the headaches.
Other medicines, including the prescription painkiller gabapentin, the steroid hydrocortisone and the asthma drug theophylline also can lessen the pain of the headaches compared to placebo.
Numerous medications are used in clinical practice to treat postdural puncture headache, so the aim of this review was to assess the effectiveness of these drugs, Basurto Ona explained.
The new review appears in the latest issue of The Cochrane Library, a publication of the Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization that evaluates medical research. Systematic reviews draw evidence-based conclusions about medical practice after considering both the content and quality of existing medical trials on a topic.
The constant headaches usually start within 15 minutes of the puncture, and grow worse when a person stands or sits up. Researchers are still debating their exact cause, but many believe that the headaches are the result of a small leak of cerebrospinal fluid at the puncture site.
Approximately 50 percent of patients with the headaches get better within the first four days after the lumbar puncture, said Sait Ashina, M.D., director of the Headache Program at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.
The Cochrane reviewers analyzed seven studies including 200 patients, which compared treatments for the headaches. The patients underwent treatment in the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, Turkey and Iran, and were mostly women who received regional anesthesia during labor.
Ashina said patients seeking relief have also used alternative therapies such as rest, hydration and abdominal compression binders. Conservative nondrug therapies for lumbar puncture headaches always need to be considered prior to starting aggressive therapies with drugs, he said.
Since most of the patients in the Cochrane studies were women in labor, the results might not have wide applicability, Basurto Ona cautioned. Larger and more diverse studies could help confirm whether caffeine is a good choice for treating most postdural puncture headaches.
More information: Basurto Ona X, et al. Drug therapy for treating post-dural puncture headache (Review). Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2011, Issue 8.
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Health Behavior News Service
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