Everything about Quadriplegia totally explained
Quadriplegia, also known as
tetraplegia, is a
symptom in which a human experiences
paralysis affecting all four limbs, although not necessarily total paralysis or loss of function.
Causes
It is caused by damage to the
brain or the
spinal cord at a high level - in particular spinal cord injuries secondary to an injury to the
cervical spine. The injury, known as a
lesion, causes victims to lose partial or total mobility of all four limbs, meaning the arms and the legs.
Typical causes of this damage are trauma (such as an auto accident, gunshot wound, fall, or sports injury) or disease (such as
transverse myelitis,
polio, or
spina bifida).
It is possible to suffer a broken neck without becoming quadriplegic, such as when the vertebrae are fractured or dislocated but the spinal cord isn't damaged. Conversely, it's possible to injure the spinal cord without breaking the spine, such as when a ruptured
disc or bony spur on the vertebra protrudes into the spinal column.
Symptoms
Although the most obvious symptom is impairment to the limbs, functioning is also impaired in the
torso. This can mean a loss or impairment in controlling
bowel and
bladder, sexual function, digestion, breathing, and other
autonomic functions. Furthermore, sensation is usually impaired in affected areas. This can manifest as numbness, reduced sensation, or burning
neuropathic pain.
Secondarily, because of their depressed functioning and immobility, quadriplegics are often more vulnerable to
pressure sores,
osteoporosis and fractures, frozen joints,
spasticity, respiratory complications and infections,
autonomic dysreflexia,
deep vein thrombosis, and cardiovascular disease.
Severity depends on both the level at which the spinal cord is injured and the extent of the injury.
An individual with an injury at C1 (the highest cervical vertebra, at the base of the skull) will likely lose function from the neck down and be
ventilator-dependent. An individual with a C7 injury may lose function from the chest down but still retain use of the arms and much of the hands.
The extent of the injury is also important. A complete severing of the spinal cord will result in complete loss of function from that vertebra down. A partial severing or even bruising of the spinal cord results in varying degrees of mixed function and paralysis. For example, there are quadriplegics who have impairment in all four limbs but can still walk and use their hands due to the relatively minor extent of their injury. Others can't walk but are able to maintain control of bladder, bowel, and sexual function.
It is common to have partial use of some limbs, such as the ability to move the arms but not the hands, or to be able to use the fingers but not have enough grip strength to lift objects. Furthermore, the deficit in the limbs may not be the same on both sides of the body; the left or right side may be more affected, depending on the location of the lesion on the spinal cord.
Terminology
The condition is also termed
tetraplegia. Both terms mean "paralysis of four limbs"; tetraplegia is more commonly used in Europe than in the US. In 1991, when the American Spinal Cord Injury Classification system was being revised, it was recommended that the term tetraplegia be used to improve consistency ("tetra", like "plegia", has a Greek root, whereas "quadra" has a Latin root).
However, quadriplegia is still the term more commonly used by the general public in the US.
Frequency and cost
There are about 5000 cervical spinal cord injuries per year in the United States and about 1000 per year in the UK. In 1988, it was estimated that lifetime care of a 27-year-old rendered tetraplegic was about US $1 million and that the total national costs were US $5.6 billion per year.
Prognosis
Delayed diagnosis of cervical spine injury has grave consequences for the victim. About one in twenty cervical fractures are missed, and about two-thirds of these patients have further spinal cord damage as a result. About 30% of cases of delayed diagnosis of cervical spine injury develop permanent neurological deficits. In high cervical injuries total paralysis from the neck down is the result. High-level quadriplegics (C5 and above) will need constant care and assistance in things such as getting dressed, eating, and bowel and bladder help. Low quadriplegics (C6-C7) can usually live independently.
In some rare cases, through intensive rehabilitation, slight movement can be regained through
"rewiring" neural connections as in the case of the late actor
Christopher Reeve.
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Related conditions
Further Information
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