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Spinal Cord Injuries Associated with Cardiopulmonary Complications
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1986
Year
Heart FailureInjury PreventionThoracic SpineSpinal DisorderConsecutive PatientsCardiopulmonary ResuscitationCardiologySpinal Cord InjurySpinal InjuryTraumatic Cardiac ArrestCervical Spinal CordEmergency MedicineCardiac ArrestSpinal TraumaThoracic SurgeryCardiopulmonary ComplicationsMedicineTraumatic QuadraplegiaAnesthesiology
Twenty-two of 83 consecutive patients with traumatic quadraplegia admitted to a regional spinal injury center had significant bradycardia. These bradycardic patients accounted for 66% of the cervical spinal cord injured patients' mortality. In general, bradycardia in patients with cervical spinal cord injuries appears to be due to unopposed vagal tone. This bradycardia is self-limited within 3-5 weeks after the onset of paraplegia and does not require permanent pacemaker therapy.