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Time Course of Respiratory Dysfunction and Motor Paralysis for 12 Weeks in Cervical Spinal Cord Injury without Bone Injury. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cervical spinal cord injury without bone injury (SCIWOBI) is common in older adults, primarily affecting the C3/C4 level, leading to significant respiratory dysfunction that hampers daily activities.
  • A study involving 54 patients (average age 65) assessed their respiratory and motor functions over 12 weeks, using metrics like vital capacity and motor scores, starting respiratory-muscle training immediately after admission.
  • Results showed a majority had impaired lung function upon admission, but both lung capacity and motor skills improved over time, indicating the importance of continuing respiratory rehabilitation for at least 12 weeks.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Cervical spinal cord injury without bone injury (SCIWOBI) is a common cervical injury in the elderly population and is most likely to occur at the C3/C4 level. Respiratory dysfunction (RD) related to the damage of the spinal respiratory center, which is close to the C4 segment, is one of the greatest obstacles in improving the activities of daily living of patients with severe paralysis. We evaluated the time course of RD and motor function in cervical SCIWOBI to identify effective medical strategies.

Methods: We followed 54 patients (49 men, 5 women; mean age: 65 years old) who were treated for SCIWOBI at our medical center from 2011 to 2014. The patients were evaluated within 72 hours of injury and were monitored for at least 12 weeks. All patients began respiratory-muscle training the day after admission regardless of whether they were treated conservatively or surgically. The percent vital capacity (%VC), forced expiratory volume (FEV) in one second/forced vital capacity ratio (FEV 1.0%), and American Spinal Injury Association motor score (MS) were recorded at admission and again at weeks 4 and 12. We calculated the %VC rate of change and the MS improvement rate over the entire period.

Results: Fifty patients (92.6%) had restrictive ventilatory impairment at admission. The %VC correlated with the upper- and lower-limb MSs at admission, and the %VC and upper- and lower-limb MSs had improved by weeks 4 and 12 after the injury. The %VC rate of change was significantly correlated with the rate of improvement in lower-limb MS throughout the entire period.

Conclusions: Lung capacity decreased in SCIWOBI owing to respiratory-muscle paralysis and upper- and lower-limb motor paralyses. Lung capacity improved as the lower limbs recovered their motor function. Respiratory rehabilitation should be continued for at least 12 weeks after SCIWOBI.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6690114PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.22603/ssrr.2018-0009DOI Listing

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