According to the Spinal Cord
Injury Information Network, about 40 people per 1 million in America
will suffer a spinal cord injury. That equates to about 11,000 new
spinal cord injuries a year. Since 2000, car accidents have been
responsible for nearly 50 percent of spinal cord injuries.
THE DAMAGE DONE:
Doctors say two types of injuries happen when someone suffers a spinal
cord injury. First, there is damage done when the injury happens --
this is the initial impact and includes bruising, bleeding and
disruption to the spinal cord and how it functions. However, there is
another kind of injury that happens after the initial impact. It's
called
Secondary Injury and it includes cell, nerve and tissue death
occurring between the first days and, possibly, weeks after the injury
happens. Neurosurgeon Michael Fehlings, M.D., from Toronto Western
Hospital, says: "This involves the death of nerve cells that might
otherwise be initially potentially alive or salvageable after the
initial injury. This occurs to persisting pressure on the damaged
spinal cord [and] disruption of the blood supply to the spinal cord ...
Inflammation can occur, which might provoke more swelling in the spinal
cord, and all of these factors together culminate in a dramatic
increase in the amount of damage to the injured spinal cord."
OPERATE EARLIER, DECREASE THE HARM: Doctors are now conducting a
study to determine just how much the timing of surgery matters after a
spinal cord injury. Dr. Fehlings says most patients will undergo
surgery after an injury to fix the spine and relieve the pressure on
it. However, there is no consensus among surgeons on when to do the
surgery. A 1999 study shows about 70 percent of people with spinal cord
injuries do undergo surgery, and the most common time to have that
surgery is five days or more after the injury occurred. However,
preliminary results from Dr. Fehlings' new research shows: earlier is
better. Dr. Fehlings and many of his colleagues say they believe
operating sooner means less harm done to the patient. He says, "The
majority of patients should undergo surgery earlier ... It turns out
that the critical time window is probably the first 24 hours after
injury." He adds, "We know it's safe. We know it's feasible to do in
the majority of patients."
WHAT IT MEANS FOR PATIENTS: Dr. Fehlings says operating early could, in
some cases, mean the difference between walking and not walking. He
says, "The stakes are potentially very high. We are seeing that some
people are walking away from injuries where they would normally not be
able to walk away. Twenty years ago, I never saw this kind of
recovery." Dr. Fehlings does emphasize patients need to be stabilized
before surgery is considered but says, in most cases, stabilization
should be possible within the first 24 hours.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
Robert Thompson
Senior Public Health Affairs Adviso
r
University Health Network
Toronto, ON, Canada
Robert.thompson@uhn.on.ca