Dyskinesia: Spinal cord is one of the important parts of human nervous system, which is responsible for transmitting information and controlling muscle activity. Therefore, after spinal cord injury, limb paralysis, muscle weakness, muscle atrophy and other motor disorders may occur.
Sensory disorders: Spinal cord is also the key way to transmit sensory information, so spinal cord injury may cause various sensory disorders, such as touch, pain, temperature, position, etc., thus leading to the loss of normal sensory functions such as touch, hearing, vision and smell.
Autonomic nerve dysfunction: the spinal cord also undertakes the function of regulating and controlling the human autonomic nervous system. Spinal cord injury may lead to autonomic nerve dysfunction, which is manifested by changes in heart rate, blood pressure, dysuria, dyspepsia and other symptoms.
Respiratory disorders: Some serious spinal cord injuries may also lead to respiratory disorders, causing weakness of chest muscles and loss of normal control of laryngeal muscles and glottis, so abnormal breathing or respiratory distress is a great danger signal.
Psychological impact: Spinal cord injury may cause huge psychological burden to patients, including anxiety, depression and mood swings. This has a great influence on rehabilitation treatment.
In a word, spinal cord injury is a serious disease, and its harm is not only reflected in the body, but also brings huge psychological burden. Therefore, early treatment and rehabilitation are very important, and patients should be given full psychological support and attention.