Although the hard bones of the spinal column protect
the soft tissues of the spinal cord, vertebrae can still
be broken or dislocated in a variety of ways and cause
traumatic injury to the spinal cord. Injuries can occur
at any level of the spinal cord. The segment of the cord
that is injured, and the severity of the injury, will
determine which body functions are compromised or lost.
Because the spinal cord acts as the main information
pathway between the brain and the rest of the body, a
spinal cord injury can have significant physiological
consequences.
Catastrophic falls, being thrown from a horse or through
a windshield, or any kind of physical trauma that crushes
and compresses the vertebrae in the neck can cause irreversible
damage at the cervical level of the spinal cord and below.
Paralysis of most of the body including the arms and
legs, called quadriplegia, is the likely result.
Automobile accidents are often responsible for spinal
cord damage in the middle back (the thoracic or lumbar
area), which can cause paralysis of the lower trunk and
lower extremities, called paraplegia.
Other kinds of injuries that directly penetrate the
spinal cord, such as gunshot or knife wounds, can either
completely or partially sever the spinal cord and create
life-long disabilities.
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.
Until World War II, a serious spinal cord injury usually
meant certain death, or at best a lifetime confined to
a wheelchair and an ongoing struggle to survive secondary
complications such as breathing problems or blood clots.
But today, 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.
Advances in research are giving doctors and patients
hope that all spinal cord injuries will eventually be
repairable. With new surgical techniques and exciting
developments in spinal nerve regeneration, the
future for spinal cord injury survivors looks brighter
every day.
Facts and Figures About Spinal Cord Injury
- There are an estimated 10,000 to 12,000 spinal cord
injuries every year in the United States.
- A quarter of a million Americans are currently living
with spinal cord injuries.
- The cost of managing the care of spinal cord injury
patients approaches $4 billion each year.
- 38.5 percent of all spinal cord injuries happen during
car accidents. Almost a quarter, 24.5 percent, are
the result of injuries relating to violent encounters,
often involving guns and knifes. The rest are due to
sporting accidents, falls, and work-related accidents.
- 55 percent of spinal cord injury victims are between
16 and 30 years old.
- More than 80 percent of spinal cord injury patients
are men