The leading cause categories for traumatic spinal cord injury are well established.
U.S. model-systems data show motor vehicle accidents as the top cause overall, followed closely by falls, with violence and sports next.
In everyday casework, that means car accidents, truck crashes, falls from height, construction incidents, diving events, and sports injuries are common starting points for serious SCI claims.
Common causes include:
- Motor vehicle accidents
- Car and truck collisions
- Falls on stairs, ladders, roofs, or unsafe property
- Worksite trauma involving injured workers
- Diving or recreational incidents
- Contact and non-contact sports injuries
- Violence or penetrating trauma
- Medical malpractice, including surgical errors or other medical negligence
A fractured vertebra, disc injury, or nerve-root injury may cause ongoing pain, weakness, and loss of function without becoming a complete cord injury.
But when the cord itself is damaged, the stakes are much higher because the injury can affect the entire body below the injury level.
Types of Spinal Cord Injuries and Resulting Paralysis
Doctors usually classify a spinal cord injury by both severity and level.
A complete spinal cord injury means there is no preserved motor or sensory function below the injury level.
An incomplete spinal cord injury or incomplete injury means some function remains below the injury, which can vary widely from person to person.
The level of injury also matters.
A cord injury in the cervical spine can affect the arms, legs, breathing, and total body independence, and it is the level most often associated with tetraplegia or quadriplegia.
Injuries lower down may affect the chest, trunk, or legs and are more often associated with paraplegia.
Injuries involving the lumbar spine may not always damage the spinal cord itself because the cord usually ends above that level, but trauma there can still injure nerve roots, cause serious neurologic loss, and produce disabling pain and weakness.
In real-world legal terms, that means such injuries can range from partial weakness and sensory loss to permanent paralysis.
A severe spinal cord injury in the neck may leave a person dependent on others for nearly all daily activity, while a lower incomplete injury may preserve some walking or transfer ability.
The precise diagnosis will often determine future medical needs, earning-capacity loss, and the value of the case.
Symptoms and Complications After a Spinal Cord Injury
The symptoms of spinal cord damage can appear immediately or worsen as swelling and bleeding progress after the initial injury.
Common symptoms include loss of sensation, weakness, numbness, paralysis, abnormal reflexes, back or neck pain, difficulty breathing, and reduced control over the bladder, bowels, or sexual function.
In more severe cases, a person may experience respiratory compromise, profound weakness, or loss of function below the injury level.
Common symptoms and complications include:
- Loss of strength or movement
- Loss of sensation
- Chronic pain, severe pain, or intense pain
- Breathing problems
- Loss of bladder control
- Problems with bowel movements
- Changes in sexual function
- Pressure injuries
- Blood clots
- Recurrent infections
- Nerve damage
- Autonomic dysfunction and other further complications
The complication profile is one reason SCI can become life-threatening long after the trauma itself.
WHO notes that people with SCI face debilitating and sometimes fatal secondary conditions, and NSCISC mortality data highlight pneumonia and septicemia as major long-term threats.
This is why fast diagnosis, immediate medical attention, and coordinated follow-up with medical professionals are so important after a suspected spinal cord injury.
Long-Term Medical Treatment and Rehabilitation Needs
A serious spinal cord injury rarely ends with the ER visit.
Many people need surgery, ICU care, inpatient rehab, physical therapy, mobility training, bladder and bowel management, respiratory support, skin care, pain management, and repeated specialist follow-up.
Mayo Clinic notes that SCI care often involves a multidisciplinary rehabilitation team and may continue for life.
Long-term needs may include:
- Ongoing specialist medical care
- Rehabilitation and physical therapy
- Wheelchairs and other medical equipment
- Home or vehicle modifications
- Medications for pain, spasticity, and infection prevention
- Bowel and bladder management supplies
- Assistive technology
- Counseling for emotional distress and mental anguish
- Treatment for ongoing pain or secondary complications
Those costs can be enormous.
A strong legal claim should therefore account for immediate hospitalization, medical expenses, future rehab, replacement equipment, home-care needs, and future medical expenses over the person’s lifetime.
For many injury victims, this is what makes SCI one of the clearest catastrophic-injury case types in personal injury litigation.