Is autonomic dysreflexia a cause of respiratory dysfunction after spinal cord injury? 2021
Spinal cord injury (SCI) often leads to impairment of the respiratory system. In fact, respiratory insufficiency is a significant cause of mortality and morbidity following SCI, related to the extent and level of the neurologic injury and its effects on the respiratory muscles (reduction in respiratory muscle strength and fatigue due to a reduction in inspiratory capacity, atelectasis and ineffective coughing). Less commonly recalled is the fact that autonomic dysreflexia (AD) is the result of parasympathetic imbalance. However, AD results from a massive, unrestrained outpouring of norepinephrine from the peripheral sympathetic ganglia. More accurately, the vagal (parasympathetic) response to this sympathetic discharge may have been responsible for the respiratory changes reported. This is not described in medical literature, although breathing difficulty is named as a common symptom and sign. The objective of this report is to describe a clinical case for the first time, that of T4 AIS (American spinal injury association impairment scale) A in which AD leads to acute respiratory insufficiency. A patient with prior history of spinal cord injury, T4 AIS A, was admitted to the Inpatient Unit to improve her respiratory function and autonomy and to discontinue the ventilation maintained after an episode of pneumonia. The patient developed AD during the rehabilitation programme, namely during hamstring stretching exercises. Besides persistent hypertension, cutaneous rash, hyperhidrosis and light-headedness, the patient was diagnosed with acute respiratory insufficiency, with desaturation and hypercapnia. The patient fully recovered, in terms of the signs and symptoms of AD, with the cessation of noxious stimulation and oxygen administration. To date, the association between AD and acute respiratory insufficiency has not been described in spinal cord injury or rehabilitation literature. This case draws attention for the first time to the possibility that respiratory insufficiency is one of the signs associated with episodes of AD and highlights the need to look at this possibility.