Spinal Cord Injury
Complete vs Incomplete โ What Changes?
A comprehensive guide to SCI rehabilitation by Dr. Dharam Pandey. Understanding the AIS classification, how it changes treatment goals, and what recovery looks like for complete vs incomplete injuries.
What is Spinal Cord Injury?
Spinal cord injury (SCI) damages the bundle of nerves that carries signals between the brain and the rest of the body. The result is loss of movement, sensation, and body functions below the level of injury.
Two Key Questions
Higher injury = more extensive loss of function. Each vertebral level corresponds to specific muscle groups and sensation.
The AIS Scale: What the Grade Means
The ASIA Impairment Scale (AIS) is the international standard for classifying SCI severity. It determines prognosis and guides rehabilitation approach.
"The AIS grade at 72 hours post-injury is highly predictive of long-term recovery. AIS A patients rarely convert, while AIS B-D patients have significant potential for improvement โ especially in the first 6-12 months."
Complete vs Incomplete: What Changes?
This single distinction changes everything โ from rehabilitation goals to technology choices to recovery expectations.
No nerve signals cross the injury site. The spinal cord is completely severed or damaged beyond function below that level.
Rehabilitation Goals:
- Maximise independence with remaining function
- Compensatory strategies (use arms for everything)
- Wheelchair skills and transfers
- Prevent secondary complications
- Adaptive equipment training
Recovery Potential:
Some nerve signals still get through. The spinal cord is partially damaged but some connections remain intact.
Rehabilitation Goals:
- Retrain and strengthen existing connections
- Task-specific practice to promote neuroplasticity
- Ambulation training (walking potential)
- Return to previous level of function
- Minimise compensatory strategies
Recovery Potential:
| Factor | Complete (AIS A) | Incomplete (AIS B-D) |
|---|---|---|
| Walking potential | Rare โ typically wheelchair dependent | Good โ 70-80% may ambulate |
| Recovery timeline | Plateau at 6-12 months | Continued improvement for years |
| Therapy approach | Compensatory + prevention | Restorative + task-specific |
| Technology focus | Adaptive equipment, smart wheelchairs | Exoskeletons, FES, gait training |
Function at Different Spinal Levels
The higher the injury, the more extensive the loss. Here's what function looks like at each level.
Even within the same level, function varies. AIS grade and individual factors matter. This is a general guide โ your physiotherapist will assess your specific abilities.
SCI Rehabilitation Phases
Rehabilitation begins immediately after injury and continues throughout life. Here's what each phase focuses on.
Acute Phase
- Spinal stabilisation (surgery/collar)
- Respiratory care and prevention
- Passive range of motion
- Pressure relief positioning
- Bowel and bladder management
Rehab Phase
- Strengthening of preserved muscles
- Mobility and transfer training
- Wheelchair skills
- ADL training (dressing, bathing)
- Family training and home preparation
Community Reintegration
- Home modification implementation
- Return to work/education planning
- Driving assessment
- Sports and recreation
- Lifelong maintenance programme
Essential Exercises for SCI Rehabilitation
Exercise selection depends entirely on injury level and completeness. These are examples โ always work with your physiotherapist.
- Never force movement beyond available range
- Monitor for autonomic dysreflexia (sudden hypertension)
- Check skin daily for pressure areas
- Ensure proper transfer techniques to prevent falls
- Watch for shoulder overuse injuries
Technology in SCI Rehabilitation
Advanced technology is transforming what's possible for spinal cord injury recovery.
"Technology is a tool, not a cure. Exoskeletons and FES are excellent for task-specific practice, but they work best when combined with intensive, goal-directed therapy. At APARC, we integrate technology with hands-on rehabilitation based on each patient's needs."
SCI Rehabilitation FAQ
Answers to questions patients and families ask most frequently.
Free Resources for SCI Recovery
Practical tools to support your rehabilitation journey.
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