TESTS AND PROCEDURES

Lumbar Drain Placement

March 16, 2019

Lumbar Drain Placement 

A lumbar drain is a soft, thin, sterile tube (also called a catheter) that your healthcare provider places through the skin of your back, into your lower (lumbar) spine. The drain collects cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). This is a clear fluid that surrounds your spinal cord and brain to protect them from injury. Read on to learn more about lumbar drain placement and how it’s done.

Side view cross section of lower spine showing spinal cord and spinal nerves in spinal canal. Catheter is inserted in skin between two vertebrae and into spinal canal next to nerves. Catheter is draining fluid from space around spinal nerves.

During the procedure

  • You lie on your side with your knees bent toward your chest. Or you sit on the edge of the bed leaning on a support, such as a chair.

  • Your healthcare provider cleans the insertion site and injects local anesthesia into the skin around the insertion site to numb it.

  • He or she inserts a long, thin needle between the bones that make up the spine (the vertebrae) in your lower back. The needle guides the lumbar drain into place. The needle is slowly removed, leaving the drain in place.

  • The drain is covered with a bandage. 

  • The drain is attached to a drainage bag and hung on an IV pole or placed beside you in bed. Your healthcare provider will instruct you where your drain needs to be placed. Follow your healthcare provider's instructions. It is important to keep your lumbar drain at the correct position.   

While the drain is in place

  • The drain often remains in place for up to 7 days.

  • A healthcare provider checks on you often while your drain is unclamped to be sure there are no problems.

  • While the drain is in place and open, you lie on your back or side. Let your nurse know if you’re uncomfortable and need to change positions. Your nurse can raise or lower the head of the bed.

  • If you must get up for any reason, your nurse must clamp the drain.

  • Don't touch the drain or allow visitors to touch it. This can cause an infection, change the drainage speed, or result in the drain pulling out.

  • Right after your healthcare provider inserts the drain, you may have leg pain. This pain should fade. If it gets worse or you feel numbness or tingling, let your nurse know.

Removing the drain

Your healthcare provider removes the drain slowly when you no longer need it. You lie on your side or sit bent over a support. After the drain is removed, your healthcare provider uses a stitch (suture) to close the hole. The healthcare provider places a bandage over the insertion site. The hole closes quickly, often within a few days. 

When to alert a healthcare provider

Let your nurse or healthcare provider know if you have any of the following symptoms while the drain is in place, or after it is removed:

  • Stiff neck

  • Headache (especially when sitting or standing) 

  • Pain, swelling, or warmth at the insertion site

  • Confusion

  • Dizziness

  • Nausea or vomiting

  • Pain, numbness, or tingling in your legs that doesn’t go away

  • Trouble controlling your bladder

  • Pain that isn’t relieved by medicines

  • Leakage of clear fluid from the insertion site or tubing

  • Fever or signs of infection, such as pus coming out from where the drain was inserted 

Updated:  

March 16, 2019

Reviewed By:  

Fetterman, Anne, RN, BSN,Jasmin, Luc, MD