Autonomic Dysreflexia |
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A Guide from the Center for Research on Women with Disabilities |
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Contents
Autonomic dysreflexia is a response to painful stimuli below your spinal cord lesion that you cannot feel, but your body recognizes as painful. Autonomic dysreflexia can occur if you have a spinal cord lesion above T6. The intact portions of your nervous system respond by constricting your blood vessels and increasing your blood pressure. Other parts of your body sense the increase in blood pressure and try to counteract the change by slowing your heart rate and sending signals to tell your blood vessels to relax. Unfortunately, these signals can’t pass through your spinal cord lesion. So your body keeps slowing your heart and sends a flood of signals to your blood vessels, while your blood pressure continues to rise. What can trigger autonomic
dysreflexia?
During autonomic dysreflexia, you may experience some or all of the following symptoms, depending on the level of spinal cord injury and the severity of the trigger:
What kind of intervention is necessary?
If you have had dysreflexia in the past, let the health care provider know in advance. You should not be left alone at any time. Once symptoms start, you may not have enough breath to tell anyone. Medication can then be prepared in advance to administer if needed. A nurse should check your blood pressure every few minutes during the exam. If your blood pressure rises, the exam should stop immediately. Be sure to alert your obstetrician that you are susceptible to autonomic dysreflexia if you become pregnant. These episodes may increase during pregnancy. Pregnant women with spinal cord injury have died during labor and delivery because the physician misdiagnosed their dysreflexia as preeclampsia, which also presents with rising blood pressure. The treatment for these two conditions is very different. The Paralyzed Veterans of America offers a consumer booklet titled, "Autonomic Dysreflexia: What You Should Know." It is available for free by calling 1-888-860-7244. The booklet also contains a wallet card that can alert medical professionals to this condition. More information is available on the web from the Paralyzed Veterans of America.
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Last Modified February 2001 Written and Designed by Stephanie Pendergrass,
Carol Howland, and Margaret Nosek Ph.D.
We welcome any questions or comments. Please contact us at crowd@bcm.tmc.edu |
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