Spinal cord injury Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
| Segmental Spinal Cord Level and Function | |
|---|---|
| Level | Function |
| Cl-C6 | Neck flexors |
| Cl-T1 | Neck extensors |
| C3, C4, C5 | Supply diaphragm |
| C5, C6 | Shoulder movement, raise arm (deltoid); flexion of elbow (biceps); C6 externally rotates the arm (supinates) |
| C6, C7, C8 | Extends elbow and wrist (triceps and wrist extensors); pronates wrist |
| C7, C8, T1 | Flexes wrist |
| C8, T1 | Supply small muscles of the hand |
| Tl -T6 | Intercostals and trunk above the waist |
| T7-L1 | Abdominal muscles |
| L1, L2, L3, L4 | Thigh flexion |
| L2, L3, L4 | Thigh adduction |
| L4, L5, S1 | Thigh abduction |
| L5, S1 S2 | Extension of leg at the hip (gluteus maximus) |
| L2, L3, L4 | Extension of leg at the knee (quadriceps femoris) |
| L4, L5, S1, S2 | Flexion of leg at the knee (hamstrings) |
| L4, L5, S1 | Dorsiflexion of foot (tibialis anterior) |
| L4, L5, S1 | Extension of toes |
| L5, S1, S2 | Plantar flexion of foot |
| L5, S1, S2 | Flexion of toes |
- Trauma : automobile accidentss, gunshotss, fallss, etc.
- Disease : polio, spina bifida, Friedreich's ataxia, etc.
Spinal cord injuries are not the same as back injuries such as ruptured diskss, spinal stenosis or pinched nerves. It is possible to "break one's neck or back" and not sustain a spinal cord injury if only the vertebrae are damaged, but the spinal cord remains intact.
About 450,000 people in the United States live with spinal cord injury, and there are about 8,000 new spinal cord injuries every year. The majority of them (82%) involve males between the ages of 16-30 and result from motor vehicle accidents (42%), violence (24%), or falls (22%).
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The exact effects of a spinal cord injury vary according to the type and level injury, and can be organized into two types:
Bowel and bladder funtion is associated with the sacral region of the spine, so it is very common to experience dysfunction of the bowel and bladder. Sexual function is also associated with the sacral region, and is also affected very often. Injuries very high on the spinal cord (C-1, C-2) will often result in a loss of many involuntary functions, such as breathing, necessitating mechanical ventilators or diaphragmatic pacemakers. Other effects of spinal cord injury can include an inability to regulate heart rate (and therefore blood pressure), reduced control of body temperature, inability to sweat below the level of injury, and chronic pain.
Below is list of typical effects of spinal cord injury by location (refer to the spinal cord map to the right). Please keep in mind that the prognosis of complete injuries are predictable, incomplete injuries are very variable and may differ form the descriptions below.
The Effects of Spinal Cord Injury
In addition to a loss of sensation and motor function below the point of injury, individuals with spinal cord injuries will often experience other changes.The Location of the Injury
Knowing the exact level of the injury on the spinal cord is important when predicting what parts of the body might be affected by paralysis and loss of function. Cervical injuries
Cervical (neck) injuries usually result in full or partial quadriplegia. Depending on the exact location of the injury, one with a spinal cord injury at the cervical may retain some amount of function as detailed below, but are otherwise completely paralyzed.Thoracic injuries
Injuries at the thoracic level and below result in paraplegia. The hands, arms, head, and breathing are usually not affected.Lumbar and Sacral injuries
The effect of injuries to the lumbar or sacral region of the spinal cord are decreased control of the legss and hips.
This is an Article on Spinal cord injury. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Spinal cord injury
