コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 st that HLA typing is a useful screen before lumbar puncture.
2 had not received antibiotic treatment before lumbar puncture.
3 ICP was measured by lumbar puncture.
4 neurological examination, venipuncture, and lumbar puncture.
5 ) underwent CT of the head before undergoing lumbar puncture.
6 ography (CT) of the head before performing a lumbar puncture.
7 s selecting relatively low-risk patients for lumbar puncture.
8 onoamine diet for a minimum of 3 days before lumbar puncture.
9 subsample of participants also consented to lumbar puncture.
10 d a neuropsychological (NP) assessment and a lumbar puncture.
11 by CT scan of the head possibly followed by lumbar puncture.
12 in patients with thrombocytopenia undergoing lumbar puncture.
13 hy subjects and NT1 patients was obtained by lumbar puncture.
14 ation and 100% required acetazolamide and/or lumbar puncture.
15 g additional clinical investigations such as lumbar puncture.
16 al alternation test (MAT), venipuncture, and lumbar puncture.
17 s a superior option for patients who require lumbar puncture.
18 n proposed to lower complication rates after lumbar puncture.
19 ts to undergo magnetic resonance imaging and lumbar puncture.
20 nts thought to be CNS negative by diagnostic lumbar puncture.
21 use of intravenous (IV) fluid bolus prior to lumbar puncture.
22 with the most common adverse event following lumbar puncture.
23 CSF was tested after lumbar puncture.
24 Coagulopathy at the time of lumbar puncture.
25 ural 3T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and lumbar puncture.
26 pathy may deter physicians from performing a lumbar puncture.
27 reduction, and aiding in the performance of lumbar punctures.
28 variant B, DNA in all of 3 patients who had lumbar punctures.
29 sease Research Center completed four or more lumbar punctures.
31 (29%) at-risk patients received a diagnostic lumbar puncture; 24 (23 women, 17 Hispanic or Latino) we
33 g 98 symptomatic patients with no documented lumbar puncture (65%), 12 (12%) were treated for and/or
34 roup was more likely to receive an indicated lumbar puncture (86% vs 32%, p<0.001), and more likely t
37 bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs) following lumbar puncture alleviates early- and late-phase neuropa
38 tine lumbar punctures with the timing of the lumbar puncture alternating between 2 and 6 hours to cap
39 on-making regarding select vs routine use of lumbar puncture among infants classified as being at low
40 rospinal fluid white-cell count on the first lumbar puncture among patients who presented with mening
41 M requires cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) through lumbar puncture-an invasive sample collection method, an
42 amples were obtained 2 weeks apart, first by lumbar puncture and 2 weeks later from an external ventr
43 CNS disease; 25 subjects (35.2%) required >1 lumbar puncture and 8 (11.3%) required ventriculostomies
44 l mean age 36.5 years, SD = 8.7) underwent a lumbar puncture and a cognitive battery prior to ART ini
45 ell as in patients with negative findings at lumbar puncture and at clinical or MR imaging follow-up
46 erior chest wall mass was nondiagnostic, and lumbar puncture and bone marrow biopsies were negative.
48 M(+) and 11 M(-) participants who underwent lumbar puncture and compared the findings to PiB-PET and
49 records of patients who had CSFP measured by lumbar puncture and data to calculate BMI at the Mayo Cl
50 registries to identify persons who underwent lumbar puncture and had cerebrospinal fluid analysis (Ja
51 cognitive impairment assessed with baseline lumbar puncture and longitudinal structural magnetic res
56 BR-tau measures are reproducible in repeated lumbar punctures and can be used to distinguish CBD from
58 l angiography use were associated with fewer lumbar punctures and higher detection of unruptured intr
59 decide how far diagnostic procedures such as lumbar punctures and immunotherapies should go in unclea
60 ation carriers and ten non-carriers) who had lumbar punctures and venepunctures, mutation carriers ha
63 am or continuous video electroencephalogram, lumbar puncture, and genetic testing may be considered i
64 ated with simultaneous ICP, assessed through lumbar puncture, and IOP measurements when supine, sitti
65 gnitive PCC) underwent clinical examination, lumbar puncture, and venipuncture >=3 months after COVID
66 rial infections are unlikely to benefit from lumbar puncture, antibiotics, or hospitalization, yet th
67 ved effective antimicrobial therapy prior to lumbar puncture are excluded, the CSF Gram stain is 92%
68 tic populations with low plasma CrAg titers, lumbar punctures are likely unnecessary as administratio
70 r catheter, subdural screw, epidural sensor, lumbar puncture, are associated with an increased risk o
71 with suspected or confirmed LF who underwent lumbar puncture as part of their routine clinical manage
75 her was cognitively healthy at 79 years, and lumbar puncture at 76 years showed normal levels of amyl
76 spinal anesthesia and patients scheduled for lumbar puncture at a university medical center were elig
77 itted with CNS symptoms or signs requiring a lumbar puncture at Mahosot Hospital, Vientiane, Laos.
80 t with hyperphenylalaninemia, require that a lumbar puncture be performed and that specific metabolit
81 ing to the hospital who had had ESI, 131 had lumbar puncture because of symptoms or signs consistent
82 rom 85 patients with gliomas who underwent a lumbar puncture because they showed neurological signs o
83 edle gauge, patient position, indication for lumbar puncture, bed rest after puncture, or clinician s
84 In CrAg-positive participants, postscreening lumbar puncture before initiating preemptive fluconazole
85 f medical records of 62,468 subjects who had lumbar puncture between 1985 and 2007 at the Mayo Clinic
86 edical records of all patients who underwent lumbar puncture between 1991 and 2007 in the neuro-ophth
87 and duration of follow-up (p=0.27) underwent lumbar puncture between March 23, 2008, and July 16, 201
88 tudy of consecutive patients who underwent 2 lumbar punctures between the beginning of 1995 and the e
89 rs in CSF (cerebrospinal fluid obtained from lumbar puncture) between ZIKV-exposed neonates with/with
91 ildren in coma or other contraindications to lumbar puncture, both of which lead to under-ascertainme
92 ration may be a risk factor for unsuccessful lumbar punctures, but to our knowledge, no studies have
93 se findings may inform decision-making about lumbar puncture by describing rates in this sample, the
94 ating leukemic blast cells during diagnostic lumbar puncture can adversely affect the treatment outco
95 al suspicion of severe second-stage disease, lumbar puncture can be avoided and fexinidazole can be g
97 ncreased (18.8%; 95% CI, 17.7% to 20.3%) and lumbar punctures decreased (-11.1%; 95% CI, -12.0% to -1
100 primary outcome was receipt of at least 1 of lumbar puncture, empirical antibiotics, or hospitalizati
104 ent, including blood pressure assessment and lumbar puncture for determination of cerebral spinal flu
106 ey are similar in age to patients undergoing lumbar puncture for evaluation of neonatal fever and are
107 t international guidelines recommend routine lumbar punctures for all febrile infants 28 days or youn
108 of diurnal cortisol patterns, and underwent lumbar punctures for cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sampling.
110 acceptable and feasible for patients than a lumbar puncture (for cerebrospinal fluid collection) or
112 altered CSF composition, we obtained CSF via lumbar puncture from patients with myotonic dystrophy ty
113 vational study, CSF samples were obtained by lumbar puncture from patients with video polysomnography
114 condary analyses included risks of traumatic lumbar puncture (>300 x 106 erythrocytes/L after excludi
116 ents with neurologic toxicity at the time of lumbar puncture had many of the highest concentrations o
120 f CSF) may be associated with transient post-lumbar puncture headache, without increasing rates of pe
122 if antigen-positive, 4) CRAG screening with lumbar puncture if antigen-positive and either amphoteri
123 Brain imaging should be performed before lumbar puncture if patients present with altered mental
124 lography, blood sampling at days 1, 3, 5 and lumbar puncture, if clinically indicated, for cerebrospi
125 ospinal fluid (CSF) obtained through routine lumbar puncture in 53 patients with suspected or known C
131 univariate and multivariable analyses of 338 lumbar punctures in the Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer N
134 Treatment studies show that the diagnostic lumbar puncture is a valuable intervention beyond its di
136 y noncontrast head computed tomography (CT); lumbar puncture is recommended if computed tomography is
137 tiatives for febrile young infants recommend lumbar puncture (LP) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) testi
139 nfected adult patients undergoing diagnostic lumbar puncture (LP) at a single center between 2011 and
142 uted tomography (CT) scan of the head before lumbar puncture (LP) in adults with community-acquired m
146 tudy of Aging patients who underwent routine lumbar puncture (LP) studies with eye examinations were
148 of microglial markers at time of diagnostic lumbar puncture (LP) with different aspects of disease a
149 Whether such patients can safely undergo lumbar puncture (LP) without prophylactic platelet trans
152 negative cerebrospinal fluid CrAg tests from lumbar punctures (LPs) at the time of CrAg screening.
154 as negative in 11 cases (4%), exclusively in lumbar punctures (LPs) performed less than 4 days after
156 ilical artery catheters (UACs), intubations, lumbar punctures (LPs), and peripheral phlebotomy perfor
157 restricted NPCs using the minimally invasive lumbar puncture method for the treatment of spinal cord
159 (aged 48-77) from the ALFA cohort with SLE, lumbar puncture (n = 393), and/or structural magnetic re
163 Lewy bodies a mean 3.4 years (SD 2.6) after lumbar puncture, of whom 31 (97%) were a-synuclein posit
164 rebrospinal fluid samples were obtained from lumbar puncture on 21 infants and children without traum
167 gns were present and was associated with the lumbar puncture opening pressure and ophthalmological ou
168 Internal validation of associations with lumbar puncture opening pressure and outcome and externa
169 variable clinical syndromes and often normal lumbar puncture opening pressure associated with this di
170 change in intracranial pressure measured by lumbar puncture opening pressure at 12 months, as assess
178 rocedures (bone marrow aspiration or biopsy, lumbar puncture, or combined procedures) was performed a
179 We directly evaluated associations of 3 post-lumbar puncture outcomes (immediate postprocedural heada
180 probability that any NICU infant received a lumbar puncture (p = .0001) or peripheral phlebotomy (p
181 ded a diagnostic and management algorithm, a lumbar puncture pack, a testing panel, and staff trainin
185 In children with cerebral malaria who had a lumbar puncture performed, angiopoietin-2 was associated
189 rs Cohort Study (A5321) underwent concurrent lumbar puncture, phlebotomy, and neurocognitive assessme
191 intrathecal injection and an identical sham lumbar puncture procedure, separated by 1 week, in a dou
193 ecal delivery of NPCs at lumbar spinal cord (lumbar puncture) represents an important and clinically
194 Intrathecal bpV(phen) infusions through a lumbar puncture rescued dorsal column sensory axons inne
200 derwent amyloid-beta PET with (18)F-AZD4694, lumbar puncture, structural MRI, and genotyping for APOE
201 underwent amyloid-B PET with (18)F-AZD4694, lumbar puncture, structural MRI, and genotyping for APOE
202 permit being enrolled in the blood draw and lumbar puncture studies, respectively, were 92% and 75%.
203 studies of varying risk-benefit profiles (a lumbar puncture study, a drug randomized controlled tria
208 Lewy bodies at 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 years after lumbar puncture than participants who were a-synuclein p
209 In a subset of subjects who underwent a lumbar puncture, there was a trend for the perimetry-abn
210 herally inserted central catheter placement; lumbar puncture; thoracentesis; paracentesis; and intuba
213 eviously known as T807) who also underwent a lumbar puncture to assess cerebrospinal fluid levels of
215 uded either a blood draw or a blood draw and lumbar puncture to explore older persons' attitudes on t
216 opsychological assessment in parallel with a lumbar puncture to obtain CSF was performed 1.5-7 years
217 urvival rates were assessed from the date of lumbar puncture to the date of diagnosis of any neurodeg
218 Disease Control and Prevention criteria for lumbar puncture underwent standardized history, neurolog
219 gns of IH likely does not require systematic lumbar puncture unless concerning symptoms or papilledem
221 ered to the injured cervical spinal cord via lumbar puncture using a mixed population of neuronal-res
222 narios, to grant leeway in 3 of 4 scenarios (lumbar puncture, vaccine, and gene transfer), and to enr
223 ort study, risk of spinal hematoma following lumbar puncture was 0.20% among patients without coagulo
225 ples were taken every 30 to 60 minutes and a lumbar puncture was performed 6 hours after the infusion
235 cy by actigraphy in the six nights preceding lumbar punctures, was associated with higher tau (r = 0.
238 ) since admission, while cranial imaging and lumbar puncture were performed after 6.3 hours (2.5-31.0
244 were monitored with daily self-ratings, and lumbar punctures were performed during both hypogonadal
250 sion for patients having elective diagnostic lumbar puncture with a platelet count less than 50 x 109
251 a-analysis to compare patient outcomes after lumbar puncture with atraumatic needles and conventional
252 CNS leukemia (CNS-3 status) or a traumatic lumbar puncture with blast cells at diagnosis and a high
253 and were taking ART and underwent venous and lumbar puncture with measurement of HIV RNA concentratio
254 )-infected Ugandan adults with CM had serial lumbar punctures with measurement of CSF opening pressur
256 angiography use increased 6-fold relative to lumbar puncture, with a 33% increase in the detection of
257 on CT, and all three subsequently underwent lumbar puncture, with no evidence of brain herniation on