People with SCI can’t sweat
The spinal cord may be
the organ that helps the body feel and move, but it also operates your sweat. Becoming
hotter and hotter is what some people with higher spinal cord injuries have to
go through until they finally cool off their body from the outside, either by
dumping cold water on their skin or basking in the AC. Paraplegics however can
usually sweat. Not being able to sweat applies generally to quads.
82% are men
Out of everyone on the
planet with a spinal cord injury, 82% are male. That’s quite the disparity
between men vs. women and most think feel it’s because men are bigger
risk-takers than women. It’s hard to argue with that. Motor vehicle crashes,
sports injuries, falls, men find themselves in these situations a lot more
often.
Before the 1940s, the
life expectancy was two years
There may not be a cure
for spinal injuries yet, but scientists have come a long way in improving
long-term prospects for people with spinal cord injuries. Prospects before the
1940s were not good. It was before antibiotic use began to be
widespread, which mean most died before the two year mark from slow deaths
related to untreatable infections; bladder, blood and skin. Paralyzed WWII
veterans are some of the first people in human history to move onto full lives
post-injury.
Less sensation, less
body hair
One of the few bonuses
of having a spinal cord injury (if you could call it that) is less body hair.
Researchers have recently discovered that body hair grows better when it’s
getting feedback from the brain. They’re not sure why, but it’s a phenomenon
that’s been observed in most people with a spinal cord injury.
Some people can’t
cough
Some people who are quadriplegic
may be able to emit a tiny cough, but that’s about as fierce of a cough most of
us can do. Reason why – spinal cord injuries don’t just effect the legs and
arms, they can affect the chest wall muscles; everything becomes paralyzed
below the level of injury. This is why respiratory failure remains the number
one cause of death among people with higher spinal cord injuries. Coughing up
phlegm is critical when fighting off colds, but the good news – cough-assist
devices and techniques like these.
They pee through their
belly buttons
Everyone thinks they
know the going-to-the-bathroom secret (catheters). But there’s one big secret
mainstream society has no idea is possible—a surgery that allows you to pee
through the belly button. That’s right, a hole is put in the belly button, with
a new urinary conduit to boot. All you need to do is insert in a catheter, put
a drainage cup between your legs, and you’re good to go. Doctor Mitrofanoff invented
this fascinating surgery.
Their legs can still
move
Mainstream society
thinks paralysis equates to the legs being absolutely frozen in time—but this
is not the case. Some people’s paralyzed legs can move and shake a lot on their
own; anything causing pain below the level of injury can cause it. Lower level
paraplegics however rarely get spasms.
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