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Research ArticleConference Proceedings

Respiratory Dysfunction and Management in Spinal Cord Injury

Robert Brown, Anthony F DiMarco, Jeannette D Hoit and Eric Garshick
Respiratory Care August 2006, 51 (8) 853-870;
Robert Brown
Pulmonary and Critical Care Unit, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, and with Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
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  • For correspondence: [email protected]
Anthony F DiMarco
Rammelkamp Research Center, MetroHealth Medical Center, and with the Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio.
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Jeannette D Hoit
Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona.
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Eric Garshick
Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Section, Medical Service, Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare System, and with Channing Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and with Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
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Abstract

Respiratory dysfunction is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in spinal cord injury (SCI), which causes impairment of respiratory muscles, reduced vital capacity, ineffective cough, reduction in lung and chest wall compliance, and excess oxygen cost of breathing due to distortion of the respiratory system. Severely affected individuals may require assisted ventilation, which can cause problems with speech production. Appropriate candidates can sometimes be liberated from mechanical ventilation by phrenic-nerve pacing and pacing of the external intercostal muscles. Partial recovery of respiratory-muscle performance occurs spontaneously. The eventual vital capacity depends on the extent of spontaneous recovery, years since injury, smoking, a history of chest injury or surgery, and maximum inspiratory pressure. Also, respiratory-muscle training and abdominal binders improve performance of the respiratory muscles. For patients on long-term ventilation, speech production is difficult. Often, practitioners are reluctant to deflate the tracheostomy tube cuff to allow speech production. Yet cuff-deflation can be done safely. Standard ventilator settings produce poor speech quality. Recent studies demonstrated vast improvement with long inspiratory time and positive end-expiratory pressure. Abdominal binders improve speech quality in patients with phrenic-nerve pacers. Recent data show that the level and completeness of injury and older age at the time of injury may not be related directly to mortality in SCI, which suggests that the care of SCI has improved. The data indicate that independent predictors of all-cause mortality include diabetes mellitus, heart disease, cigarette smoking, and percent-of-predicted forced expiratory volume in the first second. An important clinical problem in SCI is weak cough, which causes retention of secretions during infections. Methods for secretion clearance include chest physical therapy, spontaneous cough, suctioning, cough assistance by forced compression of the abdomen (“quad cough”), and mechanical insufflation-exsufflation. Recently described but not yet available for general use is activation of the abdominal muscles via an epidural electrode placed at spinal cord level T9-L1.

  • spinal cord injury
  • respiratory failure
  • diaphragm
  • rib cage
  • airway clearance

Footnotes

  • Correspondence: Robert Brown MD, Pulmonary and Critical Care Unit, Bulfinch 148, Massachusetts General Hospital, 55 Fruit Street, Boston MA 02114. E-mail: rbrown5{at}partners.org.
  • Copyright © 2006 by Daedalus Enterprises Inc.
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In this issue

Respiratory Care: 51 (8)
Respiratory Care
Vol. 51, Issue 8
1 Aug 2006
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Respiratory Dysfunction and Management in Spinal Cord Injury
Robert Brown, Anthony F DiMarco, Jeannette D Hoit, Eric Garshick
Respiratory Care Aug 2006, 51 (8) 853-870;

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Respiratory Dysfunction and Management in Spinal Cord Injury
Robert Brown, Anthony F DiMarco, Jeannette D Hoit, Eric Garshick
Respiratory Care Aug 2006, 51 (8) 853-870;
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Keywords

  • spinal cord injury
  • respiratory failure
  • diaphragm
  • rib cage
  • airway clearance

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