Therapeutic Interventions for Spinal Cord Injury

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Introduction[edit | edit source]

Respiratory Management[edit | edit source]

Spasticity Management[edit | edit source]

Contracture Management[edit | edit source]

Mobility[edit | edit source]

Transfers[edit | edit source]

Wheelchair Training[edit | edit source]

Gait Training[edit | edit source]

The ability to walk independently is a prerequisite for most daily activities. The capacity to walk in a community setting requires the ability to walk at speeds that enable an individual to cross the street in the time allotted by pedestrian lights, to step on and off a moving walkway, in and out of automatic doors, walk around furniture, under and over objects and negotiate kerbs. A walking velocity of 1.1 - 1.5 m/s is considered to be fast enough to function as a pedestrian in different environmental and social contexts. The major requirements for successful walking include; [1]

  • Support of body mass by lower limbs
  • Propulsion of the body in the intended direction
  • The production of a basic locomotor rhythm
  • Dynamic balance control of the moving body
  • Flexibility, i.e. the ability to adapt the movement to changing environmental demands and goals.

Walking dysfunction is common in individuals with an incomplete spinal cord injury, arising not only from the impairments associated with the spinal cord lesion but also from secondary cardiovascular and musculoskeletal consequences of disuse and physical inactivity. Muscle weakness and paralysis, poor motor control and soft tissue contracture are major contributors to walking dysfunction post spinal cord injury.

Overground Training[edit | edit source]

Treadmill Training[edit | edit source]

The incentive to provide a challenging environment, in which there is an opportunity to practise repetitively the missing components of gait, has underpinned another task-specific activity. This involves using a treadmill for gait re-training and also for improvements in cardiovascular function. A harness can be used for individuals with significant functional limitations, and this also offers the opportunity to grade the amount of body weight support provided. Therapists help to facilitate alternating stepping and weight-bearing, and as many as three therapists may be required to assist with the complete gait cycle. It has been suggested that treadmill training can support Gait Re-education as;

  1. It allows a complete practice of the full gait cycle
  2. It provides opportunity  for gaining improvements in speed and endurance
  3. It optimises cardiovascular fitness

Task-specific training on a treadmill has also been shown to induce expansion of subcortical and cortical locomotion areas in individuals following stroke and spinal cord injury. It can result in an increase in cadence and a shortening of step length as compared to overground walking.

Upper Limb Management[edit | edit source]

Robotics[edit | edit source]

Over the past decade robotics technologies are more commonly incorporated into the daily treatment schedule of many individuals post spinal cord injury. These interventions hold greater promise than simply replicating traditional therapy, because they allow therapists an unprecedented ability to specify and monitor movement features such as speed, direction, amplitude, and joint coordination patterns and to introduce controlled perturbations into therapy.

Rehabilitation robotics is a field of research dedicated to understanding and augmenting rehabilitation through the application of robotic devices. Rehabilitation robotics includes development of robotic devices tailored for assisting different sensorimotor functions (e.g. arm, hand, leg, ankle, development of different schemes of assisting therapeutic training, and assessment of sensorimotor performance). Rehabilitation using robotics is generally well tolerated, and has been found to be an effective adjunct to therapy in individuals with motor impairments as a result of a spinal cord injury.

Robotic devices provide safe, intensive and task oriented rehabilitation allowing;

  1. precisely controllable assistance or resistance during movements
  2. objective and quantifiable measures of subject performance
  3. good repeatability
  4. increased training motivation through the use of interactive biofeedback

You can read more about Robotic Rehabilitation for the Lower Extremity and Upper Extremity Rehabilitation using Robotics on Physiopedia.

Exercise[edit | edit source]

Strength Training[edit | edit source]

Strength training, or progressive resistance training (PRT), is generally defined as training in which the resistance against which a muscle generates force is progressively increased over time[2]. The maximal weight or resistance a person can lift or move to complete the movement is defined as the one repetition maximum (1 RM). Prescriptions of repetitions at what RM vary depending on prior experience with PRT and co-morbidities. One recommendation (Level IIA evidence) from the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Heart Association[3] suggests "8–10 exercises be performed on two or more nonconsecutive days per week using the major muscle groups". The guideline also suggests 10-15 repetitions with a weight for resistance at a intensity of 5 or 6 on a ten point scale[3].


Muscle hypertrophy and increased strength, along with the changes in body composition, the hormonal and nervous systems, have a positive impact on the daily activities of living and functional independence of the older adult. One study shows that even into older adults into their ninth decade can experience increases in muscle strength and associated improvements in function following an eight week strength training programme[4]. Strength training can also have substantial benefits for protection from injury in the elderly, as falling is strongly related to hip weakness, poor balance, and postural sway.[5]

Progressive resistance training is the most common form of strength training.

It is thought to be most effective when:

  • it incorporates resistance
  • it is appropriately progressed
  • the mode of training is similar to the task in which strength gains are required

Cardiovascular Training[edit | edit source]

Pain Management[edit | edit source]

Electrotherapy[edit | edit source]

Resources[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Forssberg H (1982) Spinal locomotion functions and descending control. In Brain Stem Control of Spinal Mechanisms (eds B Sjolund, A Bjorklund), Elsevier Biomedical Press,New York.
  2. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named :5
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  4. Fiatarone MA, Marks EC, Ryan ND, Meredith CN, Lipsitz, LA, Evans WJ. High-intensity strength training in nonagenarians effects on skeletal muscle. JAMA. 1990;263(22):3029-3034.
  5. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named los