A lumbar puncture is a test to check the fluid that circulates round the brain and spinal cord (the cerebrospinal fluid or CSF). For cancer, this test is usually done to see if there are any cancer cells in the fluid. But it is also used to look for infection.
Your doctor will need to put a needle into your spine and collect some of the fluid that drains out. You will be asked to lie on your side and curl up slightly so that your back rounds towards the doctor, who will be behind you. It is important to lie as still as you can, so make sure you are reasonably comfortable before the doctor starts.
You may have to change into a gown first. The doctor will put on gloves and drape some sterile cloths over you before they start. This helps to stop any infection from getting into your spinal fluid. The doctor will inject a little local anaesthetic to numb the area. Once the anaesthetic has worked, they will push the needle very carefully into the small of your back. The needle goes into the space around the spinal cord. Once it is in the right place, it only takes a couple of seconds for a few drops of fluid to drip out into a sterile pot. Then the doctor takes the needle out. The fluid is sent to the laboratory and examined under the microscope for cancer cells. The diagram below shows how you lie and where the doctor puts the needle.
A lumbar puncture can be uncomfortable, but is not usually painful because of the local anaesthetic. You may feel some pressure and a slight soreness when the needle first goes in.
After a lumbar puncture, you can usually go home the same day. But your doctor will probably ask you to lie flat for a few hours after the test. This helps to prevent a headache afterwards. You may still get a headache after this test, so make sure you have some painkillers at home, just in case.
It can take time for test results to come through. How long will depend on why you are having the test. It could be a day or two but can be up to a couple of weeks. The sample of spinal fluid goes straight to the medical laboratory. There, a pathologist examines it under a microscope and does tests. What exactly is done will depend on why you are having the lumbar puncture. When all the tests are done, the pathologist dictates a report. The typed up report then goes to your specialist, who gives the results to you.
Understandably, waiting for results can make you anxious. If your doctor needed the results urgently, they will put that on the request form and so the results may be ready the same day. Try to remember to ask your doctor how long you should expect to wait for the results when you are first asked to go for the test. If it is not an emergency, and you have not heard a couple of weeks after your test, ring your doctor's secretary to check if they are back.
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