About Spinal Cord
Injury
A spinal cord injury usually begins with a sudden, traumatic
blow to the spine that fractures or dislocates vertebrae. The
damage begins at the moment of injury when displaced bone
fragments, disc material, or ligaments bruise or tear into
spinal cord tissue.
Most injuries to the spinal cord don't completely sever it.
Instead, an injury is more likely to cause fractures and
compression of the vertebrae, which then crush and destroy the
axons, extensions of nerve cells that carry signals up and down
the spinal cord between the brain and the rest of the body.
An injury to the spinal cord can damage a few, many, or
almost all of these axons. Some injuries will allow almost
complete recovery.Others will result in complete paralysis.
Treatment
Improved emergency care for people with spinal cord injuries
and aggressive treatment and rehabilitation can minimize damage
to the nervous system and even restore limited abilities.
Respiratory complications are often an indication of the
severity of spinal cord injury. About one-third of those with
injury to the neck area will need help with breathing and
require respiratory support.
The steroid drug methylprednisolone appears to reduce the
damage to nerve cells if it is given within the first 8 hours
after injury. Rehabilitation programs combine physical
therapies with skill-building activities and counseling to
provide social and emotional support.
Prognosis
Spinal cord injuries are classified as either complete or
incomplete. An incomplete injury means that the ability of the
spinal cord to convey messages to or from the brain is not
completely lost.
People with incomplete injuries retain some motor or sensory
function below the injury. A complete injury is indicated by a
total lack of sensory and motor function below the level of
injury.
People who survive a spinal cord injury will most likely
have medical complications such as chronic pain and bladder and
bowel dysfunction, along with an increased susceptibility to
respiratory and heart problems. Successful recovery depends
upon how well these chronic conditions are handled day to
day.
Research
Public Health Authorities conduct spinal cord research in
laboratories and support additional research through grants to
major medical institutions across the country.
Advances in research are giving doctors and patients hope
that repairing injured spinal cords is a reachable goal.
Advances in basic research are also being matched by
progress in clinical research, especially in understanding the
kinds of physical rehabilitation that work best to restore
function.
Some of the more promising rehabilitation techniques are
helping spinal cord injury patients become more mobile.
Reference for Spinal Cord Injury
National Institutes of Health
Health
Related Websites
The National Cancer
Institute
The National Eye
Institute
The National Heart, Lung,
and Blood Institute
National Institute on
Aging
National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases
National Institute of
Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
National Institute of
Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
National Institute on Drug
Abuse
National Institute of Mental
Health
National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke
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