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what is involved with immediate medical management of SCI with traumatic cases?
stabilization and decompression of the spine
steroid administration and hypothermia
what is involved with immediate medical management of SCI with non-traumatic cases?
essential to do a thorough differential diagnosis
bowel and bladder function is important
reflexes (UMN signs, LMN signs)
what is prognosis of stabilization and decompression of the spine?
20% within 14 hours regained 2 AIS grades or more within 6 months
compared to 9% with delayed surgery (2 days post-SCI)
what are common stabilization orthoses used for the cervical spine?
halo
minerva
cervical collar
what are common stabilization orthoses used for the thoracolumbosacral region?
TLSO
aspen
jewett
what are the areas of critical concern following SCI?
cardiovascular changes (HTN, autonomic dysreflexia)
bladder and bowel dysfunction
respiration
skin integrity
spasticity
what patient population commonly has cardiac and vasomotor changes?
T6 injury or above interrupts supraspinal sympathetic control
what are common cardiac and vasomotor changes?
bradycardia
hypotension (systolic 90-110) and orthostatic hypotension
DVT
impaired thermoregulation
reduced exercise tolerance
autonomic dysreflexia
autonomic dysreflexia develops if SCI is ______
above T6
why does bradycardia occur?
only parasympathetic function to control the heart (vagus nerve- CN X)
bradyarrhythmia
what causes hypotension and OH?
blood pools in vessels and organs
loss of sympathetic reflexes that control BP with position changes
what causes DVT?
venous stasis and changes in blood platelets/fibrinogen
what leads to impaired thermoregulation? what SCI level is this common in?
primarily cervical level
hyperthermia due to loss of sympathetic control of sweating
what is a sympathetic surge?
strong sensory stimulus (sometimes noxious) below the level of the injury that ascends and triggers a sympathetic response
what are body responses after a sympathetic surge?
pronounce HTN (20-40 mmHf above "normal" for person with SCI)
vasoconstriction
heart rate is slowed due to CN X
descending inhibitory responses are blocked by the injury
what are symptoms associated with vasoconstriction?
sweating, piloerection (goosebumps), facial flushing, headache, blurred vision, stuffy nose
autonomic dysreflexia is a ______ condition
life threatening
what happens if autonomic dysreflexia is not stopped?
seizures, stroke, MI, pulmonary edema, death
what are causes of autonomic dysreflexia?
bladder: full bladder or blocked catheter, kidney stones, UTI
GI tract: bowel impaction and distension
integ: tight clothing/shoes, pressure ulcers, blisters/burns or bug bites
reproductive system: intercourse; ejaculation, labor, menstruation
other: fracture, DVT, heterotopic ossification
describe general intervention for autonomic dysreflexia
take BP and continue to monitor frequently
sit the person up with lower extremities down (lower BP and improve cerebral circulation)
loosen clothing/belts and investigate for underlying stimulus and remove it/address it
call for medical support/911 if underlying cause not found or BP remains elevated
what will BP look like in a SCI patient with autonomic dysreflexia?
patients with SCI generally are hypotensive at baseline, so BP may be in "normal" range for non-SCI population
describe spastic bladder
UMN issue, leaks
lesion to spinal cord segments above conus medullaris and sacral segments (S2, S3, S4)
sacral reflex is overactive causing the bladder to react regardless of amount of urine in the bladder
failure to store urine
describe flaccid bladder
areflexic, LMN
urinary retention
sacral reflex is blunted or absent entirely
urine is not expelled from the bladder (sphnicter dyssynergia, reflux damages ureters and kidnets, renal caliculi)
_____ is very common following SCI
UTI
describe spastic bowel dysfunction
above S2 (UMN) spinal cord segment
reflex defecation can occur when the rectum fills with stool
use suppositories or digital stimulation to initiate peristalsis (valsalva or abdominal massage)
describe flaccid/areflexic bowel
S2-S4 spinal cord segments, conus medullaris or cauda equina (LMN)
bowel won't reflexively empty (constipation and bowel impaction)
manual evacuation and gentle valsalva
what muscle are involved with inspiration? what are their nerve root levels?
diaphragm: C3-C5
scalenes: C2-C7
what muscle are involved with expiration? what are their nerve root levels?
sternomastoid: accessory nerve and C2-C3
intercostals: T1-T11
abdominal muscles especially transversus abdominis: T7-L1
when does paralysis of the diaphragm occur? what is the associated patient presentation?
complete lesions C4 and above
paradoxical breathing pattern, dependent on ventilator, abset cough
when does paresis of the diaphragm occur? what is the associated patient presentation?
incomplete injury to C2-C4-5
may need ventilator
when does paralysis/paresis of intercostal and abdominal muscles occur? what is the associated patient presentation?
complete or incomplete SCI from C5 to T11
cough is extraordinarily weak with upper thoracic injuries above T5 due to lack of abdominal support (T6-T12)
ventilator not requires unless complications arise
teach assisted cough
what can compensate for abdominal laxity in sitting for people with tetraplegia?
abdominal binder
what happens with supine positions and respiration?
supine allows gravity to pull the abdominal contents back, allowing weak contractions of the diaphragm to expand the thorax for respiration
what is involved with skin integrity in the acute phase?
altered sensation
immobility due to paralysis/paresis
increased risk with tracheostomy, prolonged recovery following surgical decompression, low arterial BP in ED
sacrum/coccyx, ischium, greater trochanter, heels, also back of head, ears, scapula, elbows, and knees
what positioning can lead to pressure injury in sitting with SCI?
sitting with posterior pelvic tilt and shearing forces from sliding forward in wheelchair
what positioning can lead to pressure injury in bed with SCI?
sliding down in bed
sitting reclined in bed increased shear at sacrum, do not elevate HOB past 30 degrees for more than 20 minutes
what is involved with pressure injury prevention?
change position every 2 hours
HOB no greater than 30 degrees
float the heels
avoid dragging/scooting --> shearing forces
use overhead lift system
regular skin checks
nutrition
monitor sweating and incontinence
describe spasticity after SCI injury
after spinal shock has resolved, spasticity and hypertonia in muscles that have loss descending motor drive (UMN lesion)
disruption to CST
reflexes below injury level will be hyperreflexic, clonus and upgoing Babinski, medications
describe flaccidity after SCI injury
flaccidity occurs when alpha motor neurons, the peripheral nerve, or ventral nerve root is damaged (LMN lesion)
conus medullaris/cauda equina
what happens with mot injuries below the T11 vertebral body?
will have a LMN injury in addition to injury to the spinal cord proper due to the presence of nerve roots traveling distally to exist the lumbosacral region
what is heterotopic ossification? what is it associated ith?
develops within first 2 months
associated with spasticity, smoking, UTI, pneumonia
nonspecific signs of inflammation --> joint and muscle pain and swelling in region and a low fever
PT focus on improving ROM once acute phase resolves
describe osteoporosis and its relation to SCI
after SCI, get bone resorption and calcium in the urine
bone mineral loss up to 50% in hip and knee
weight bearing and muscle contraction activities can help (standing frame or tilt table)
who is at high risk for fracture?
under 16 years old
high alcohol use
low BMI
SCI >10 years, motor complete SCI, paraplegia
female
prior fx (or family history of fx)
use of anticonvulsants, opioids, or heparin)