10.2.2 Spinal Cord Injury Flashcards
Define shock
State in body of inadequate perfusion for tissue oxygenation of essential organs
- important parts of body does not get enough blood
Causes of shock
Where is the blood?
Hypovolemic shock
- bleed out / blood in pelvis
- blood is not in intravascular space
- tachy + hypotensive
Cardiogenic shock
- “pump stopped working”
- tachy + hypotensive
Septic shock
- “distributive shock” - blood distributed poorly to body
- vasodilatation
- capillary leak
- blood pool in periphery (legs)
- tachycardia + hypotensive
Anaphylactic shock
- “distributive shock”
- hypersensitivity reaction
- vasodilatation
- blood in periphery
- tachy + hypotensive
Neurogenic shock
- “distributive shock”
- bradycardia + hypotension
- blood pools in periphery
- blood cannot responds
Define neurogenic shock
HEMODYNAMIC SEQUELAE OF SPINAL SHOCK
- Hypotension resulting from loss of peripheral vascular resistance
- Resulting from sympathetic outflow disruption (T1-L2) – Unopposed Vagal parasympathetic tone
- Hypotension, bradycardia and venous pooling, warm skin
What happens when there is a disruption of the reflex pathway with a spinal cord injury?
Below level of injury
- no motor
- no sensation
- reflexes present
What happens to the reflex pathway with spinal shock?
Every cell below injury stops working
- No motor
- no sensation
- no reflexes
What is spinal cord dysfunction based on?
Based on physiological rather than structural disruption
What reflex is used to assess spinal shock?
Bulbocavernosus reflex
- Contraction of the anal sphincter in response to- stimulation on Trigone of bladder (gentle catheter tug), -squeeze on the glans penis or gentle direct stimulation to the clitoris
- Absence indicates spinal shock,CAUDA EQUINA or CONUS MEDULLARIS INJURY
- Return of BC reflex indicates end of spinal shock– unlikely further improvement in neurology
ASIA score
Grading of neurological injury
Can only be done after pt is out of spinal shock and reflexes have returned
Complete spinal cord injury:
- No sensation or voluntary motor function caudal to the level of injury
- Presence of intact BC reflex (no spinal shock)
- Reflexes return below level of injury
- Named by last level of partial neurological function
- Expect one to two levels of additional root return
- Prognosis for further recovery – extremely poor
Incomplete spinal cord injury:
- Some neurological function caudal to level of injury after return of BC reflex
- The greater the function, and the faster the recovery, the better prognosis expected
- Sacral sparing – perianal sensation, voluntary rectal motor function, great toe flexor activity – indicates @ least partial long tract continuity
- Potential for recovery following resolution of spinal shock
Patterns of incomplete SCI: BROWN SEQUARD
Hemicord injury (half of spinal cord gets injured)
- Ipsilateral muscle paralysis
- Ipsilateral loss of proprioception / light touch
- Contralateral loss of pain and temperature
cut off one side; opposite side will be affected
Good prognosis
- >90% patients regaining bowel and bladder function, and ambulatory capacity
Patterns of incomplete SCI: CENTRAL CORD SYNDROME
- Most common
- Frequently ass. with extension injury in cervical spondylosis
- Flaccid paralysis in UL; spastic paralysis in LL (arms»>legs)
- watershed areas
3 “mores”
- Motor > Sensory
- Upper > lower extremity
- Distal (hands) > proximal
Fair prognosis:
- 50-60% of patients regaining motor and sensory function to lower extremities
- Permanent central grey matter destruction results in poor hand function
Patterns of incomplete SCI: CONUS MEDULLARIS SYNDROME
- T12-L1 injuries (tip of spinal cord)
- Loss of voluntary bowel and bladder control
- Mixed UMN & LMN lesion
- Preserved lumbar root function
- Complete or incomplete
- BC reflex may be permanently lost
Cauda equina syndrome
- Caused by lumbosacral root compression within lumbar spinal canal
- Only LMN lesion
- Clinical findings:
➡️Saddle anaesthesia
➡️Bilateral radicular pain
➡️Numbness
➡️Weakness
➡️Hypo-/areflexia
➡️Loss of voluntary bladder or bowel control
Which level does the spinal cord typically terminate in an adult?
L1/2
Does spinal shock lead to hypotension and bradycardia?
No