Virtual Townhall Meeting: Reducing the Risk of Spinal Cord Injuries for People with SCI
Dec 25, 2015
Virtual Townhall Meeting:
Reducing the Risk of Spinal Cord Injuries for People with SCI
Rehabilitation Research and Training Center: Secondary Conditions in the Rehabilitation of Individuals with Spinal Cord Injuries
Research Sites:
National Rehabilitation Hospital, Washington DC.
University of Miami School of Medicine
Collaborators: Independent Living Research Utilization Program
The National Spinal Cord Injury Association
Spinal Cord Injury Network
RRTC TeamRRTC Team
• Composed of national leaders in SCI medicine, research & advocacy– Consumers– SCI clinicians– SCI researchers– SCI organizations– Independent living
advocates
RRTC Mission1. Expand our understanding and prevention of
secondary conditions after SCI, including– Cardiovascular disease– Osteoporosis– Depression– Quality of life– Pain– Decubitus ulcers– Respiratory complications
2. Participation from consumers 3. Dedicated to education
Secondary Conditions After SCI
• People with SCI are surviving longer
• Chronic diseases are now being seen in people with SCI– Heart disease– Cancer
“Accelerated Aging”
• In people with SCI, this can be the occurrence of disease earlier than expected compared with able-bodied people
• In some cases, it can also mean that the disease occurs more rapidly or is more aggressive
Exercise
• Known to decrease the risk for many diseases, including diabetes, stroke, heart disease, and some cancers
• People with SCI exercise less than others
Cardiovascular Disease and SCI
• Diabetes occurs more often
• Heart disease occurs with the same or greater frequency in people with SCI
• Heart disease strikes people younger
• Heart disease is more advanced at diagnosis
Cholesterol
• Total cholesterol
• HDL = Healthy cholesterol = High
• LDL = Lousy cholesterol = Low
• Low HDL and high LDL contribute to heart disease risk
Cholesterol and SCI
• HDL tends to be lower– Can increase HDL with exercise
• LDL tends to be higher– Can decrease LDL by eating less fat and with
medications
What We Are Doing…
• We will determine typical levels of the different types of cholesterol according to type of SCI
• Then, we can give recommendations about the need to change one’s diet, exercise level, or even start medications
Osteoporosis
• Decreased bone mass
• Typically occurs much more often in women than in men
• In women, it usually occurs after menopause
• Significant osteoporosis in men is rare
• Danger = fractures
Osteoporosis and SCI
• Men AND women affected
• Loss of bone mass starts within DAYS of SCI (hence “accelerated aging”)
• Loss of bone mass continues for months-years
• Loss of bone mass is much greater
• Loss of bone mass occurs below the SCI
Osteoporosis and Broken Bones
• Without SCI– Lower spine
– Wrist
– Hip
• With SCI– Around the knee
– Lower leg
How Do I Prevent Osteoporosis?
• Exercise– Type of exercise dependent on type of SCI– Functional electrical stimulation– Standing– Walking
• Medications– Bisphosphonates, PTH, Statins showing
promise
Other Questions
• There are numerous secondary conditions that occur after SCI– Breathing problems– Depression– Bladder infection– Skin breakdown
Other Questions
• Will regular exercise actually prevent these secondary conditions?
• What type of exercise is best for me?
• Where is the best place to exercise, at home or at the gym?
Some Answers….Soon
• We will try to determine the best place for and best type of exercise
• We will determine whether regular exercise actually does decrease secondary conditions after SCI
Training activities
• Prevent secondary conditions in people with newly acquired spinal cord injury as they get discharged from the rehabilitation hospital
• Educate future healthcare professionals about secondary conditions and the benefits of exercise from a consumer perspective
Prevention of secondary conditions
• NRH and SCI Network are developing a peer mentor program to monitor and prevent secondary conditions among people with new SCI
• 10 peer mentors will meet weekly by phone and in person with 150 mentees
• Peer mentors will be supervised weekly by hospital staff and SCI Life Consultants
What peer mentors do...
• Provide information about secondary conditions and prevention
• Demonstrate prevention techniques• Discuss and answer questions around prevention
and exercise• Support community integration• Initiate referrals to clinical providers when needed• Update their information and training on an ongoing
basis
The outcomes we are tracking
• Reduction in the occurrence of pressure ulcers, urinary tract infections, pain, neurocognitive problems, general deconditioning
• Fewer hospitalizations for avoidable complications
• Better self-management and control over SCI
Consumer Professional Partnership Program (CPPP)
• Consumer-directed and delivered education program about prevention and exercise for physical therapy and medical students
• Individuals with SCI will co-teach program at Washington DC area universities
• 1000 future health professionals will be trained in 3 hour sessions
• Integration in existing curricula and continuing education programs
CPPP continued...• Content will focus on “what is important from a
consumer perspective”• Examples include “Barriers to obtain medical
care”; “experiences with medical complications”; “patient-provider communication”; “consumer-defined strategies to prevent secondary conditions”; “benefits of exercise”
• Help us develop this program at the second Virtual Townhall Meeting in May
The Virtual Resource Network on Exercise and Prevention
(VRNEP)• RRTC partner ILRU is developing the VRNEP
consisting of• A fully accessible Internet site• A Virtual Resource Library (publications and links
about exercise and prevention)• A video library• Interactive meetings with SCI Life Consultants,
Consumers, Advocates and Clinical Experts• Check back, we need your input!
Virtual Townhall Meetings (VTHM)
• Every quarter over the next 5 years
• We ask for your support and input on RRTC topics
• Become a virtual RRTC member and participant
Today’s questions
What are your personal experiences with secondary conditions related to spinal cord injury?
As a person with SCI what are your personal experiences with exercise and physical activity?
What would you like the RRTC on Secondary Conditions and Exercise accomplish?