What is Paralysis? What are the Types of Paralysis? How Does Someone Become Paralyzed?

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  • Опубликовано: 29 окт 2020
  • What is Paralysis?
    Paralysis is the inability-whether temporary or permanent-to move a part of the body. In almost all cases, paralysis is due to nerve damage, not to an injury to the affected region. For instance, an injury in the middle or lower regions of the spinal cord is likely to disrupt function below the injury, including the ability to move the feet or feel sensations, even though the actual structures are as healthy as ever.
    So what happens to the body when it is paralyzed? That depends on the cause of the paralysis, but generally at least one of the following factors is in play:
    The brain is unable to relay a signal to an area of the body due to injuries to the brain.
    The brain is able to sense touch and other sensations in the body, but is unable to effectively relay a response due to injuries in the spinal cord.
    The brain can neither send nor receive signals to an area of the body due to injuries in the spinal cord.
    The spinal cord is like the brain’s relay system, so when something in the spinal cord doesn’t work or is injured, paralysis is often the result. These injuries can be the product of traumatic accidents, or diseases such as strokes and polio. Most spinal cord injuries are incomplete, which means that some signals still travel up and down the cord. With an incomplete injury, you may retain some sensation and movement all the time, or the severity of the paralysis may change-sometimes on a highly unpredictable basis. A complete spinal cord injury, by contrast, completely compressed or severs the nerves in the spinal cord, making it impossible for the signal to travel.
    How Does Someone Become Paralyzed?
    There are many different causes of paralysis-and each one may result in a different kind of paralysis, such as quadriplegia (paralysis of arms and legs), paraplegia (being paralyzed from the waist down), monoplegia (paralysis in one limb), or hemiplegia (being paralyzed on one side of the body). According to the Christopher Reeve Foundation, approximately “1.2 million Americans are living with paralysis resulting from spinal cord injuries.” Car accidents, falls, sporting injuries, and acts of interpersonal violence are the cause of most spinal cord injuries.
    Types of Paralysis
    What is Monoplegia?
    Monoplegia is paralysis of a single area of the body, most typically one limb. People with monoplegia typically retain control over the rest of their body, but cannot move or feel sensations in the affected limb.
    What Causes Monoplegia?
    Though cerebral palsy is the leading cause of monoplegia, a number of other injuries and ailments can lead to this form of partial paralysis, including:
    Stroke
    Tumors
    Nerve damage due to injuries or diseases
    Nerve impingement
    Motor neuron damage
    Brain injuries
    Impacted or severed nerves at the affected location
    What is Hemiplegia?
    Hemiplegia affects an arm and a leg on the same side of the body. With hemiplegia, the degree of paralysis varies from person to person, and may change over time. Hemiplegia often begins with a sensation of pins and needles, progresses to muscle weakness, and escalates to complete paralysis. However, many people with hemiplegia find that their degree of functioning varies from day to day, and depending on their overall health, activity level, and other factors.
    What Causes Hemiplegia?
    As with monoplegia, the most common cause is cerebral palsy. However, other conditions, such as incomplete spinal cord injuries, brain injuries, and nervous system disorders can also result in hemiplegia.
    What is Paraplegia?
    Paraplegia refers to paralysis below the waist, and usually affects both legs, the hips, and other functions, such as sexuality and elimination. Though stereotypes of being paralyzed below the waist hold that paraplegics cannot walk, move their legs, or feel anything below the waist, the reality of paraplegia varies from person to person-and sometimes, from day to day.
    What Causes Paraplegia?
    Spinal cord injuries are the most common cause of paraplegia. These injuries impede the brain's ability to send and receive signals below the site of the injury.
    Quadriplegia
    What is Quadriplegia?
    Quadriplegia, which is often referred to as tetraplegia, is paralysis below the neck. All four limbs, as well as the torso, are typically affected. As with paraplegia, though, the degree of disability and loss of function may vary from person to person, and even from moment to moment. Likewise, some quadriplegics spontaneously regain some or all functioning, while others slowly retrain their brains and bodies through dedicated physical therapy and exercise.
    What Causes Quadriplegia?
    Occasionally, quadriplegia is a temporary condition due to brain injuries, stroke, or temporary compression of spinal cord nerves. Some spinal cord injury survivors temporarily suffer from quadriplegia immediately after the injury, then experience a less systematic form of paralysis as swelling goes down, the nerves become less compressed, or surgery reverses some damage.
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Комментарии • 47

  • @vincenthearne2190
    @vincenthearne2190 2 года назад +4

    Traumatic Accidents , Lethal Attacks Also

  • @SpirituallyNixawake
    @SpirituallyNixawake Год назад +3

    Thank you for you clear explanation I have got nerve damage. It’s horrible all I can feel is something revving up and tingles constantly. This answered lots for me too. 😊

  • @bcgmar7131
    @bcgmar7131 3 года назад +16

    Thank you . I’m learning for my 3 year old who is currently paralyzed from the neck down from a car accident .

    • @spinalcord3321
      @spinalcord3321  3 года назад +6

      So sorry to read this. Please consider speaking with other parents to learn from their experiences. This map may help you find others: www.spinalcord.com/spinal-cord-injury-support-groups-map Or call us at 877-336-7192 and we will help you find resources or answer questions you may have.

    • @vincenthearne2190
      @vincenthearne2190 2 года назад +3

      Big Prayers 🙏

    • @jh0347
      @jh0347 2 года назад +1

      Big prayers to your daughter 🙏🏽

    • @kiannn6634
      @kiannn6634 Год назад +1

      sending love and prayers🤲🏼

    • @ArifBillahOnGoogle
      @ArifBillahOnGoogle Год назад +1

      May Allah cure her/him.

  • @parimalrane.9544
    @parimalrane.9544 2 года назад +7

    My father's right side totally paralyzed since 1 year. He gone through IC bleed craniotomy.He is not recovering 😔
    Any one here who have improved from this stage please comment here for suggestion

    • @Sydlovesu
      @Sydlovesu 2 года назад +2

      I hope your dad is okay right now, keep praying, you'll get through this! ❤

    • @1cOr1e
      @1cOr1e Год назад

      There is no time so it's not possible
      Self healing ability to regeneration

  • @forevermore9431
    @forevermore9431 Год назад +1

    Thank you, this video was very informative. I certainly have little knowledge and misconceptions about paralysis and this is a very good place to start.

  • @user-ni7ml2xk1c
    @user-ni7ml2xk1c 3 года назад +2

    Very good video with good information

  • @MP-rg8dv
    @MP-rg8dv 3 года назад +9

    Very nice and simplified explanation. I loved it, God bless you for sharing such knowledge in simplified form. 🙏

  • @Shawn012
    @Shawn012 Год назад +1

    Just wow explaination

  • @matthewelliott5625
    @matthewelliott5625 2 года назад +4

    Very good information about SCI. I’m a T4 complete par 26 years ago. And I’m still learning.

  • @onlineteacher68
    @onlineteacher68 2 года назад +4

    In 2020 I had temporary paralysis in my lower body.

  • @Cripp777
    @Cripp777 3 года назад +4

    That's really good showing the different types of paralysis. I'm a quadriplegic from an auto accident

    • @spinalcord3321
      @spinalcord3321  3 года назад

      Thank you for the positive feedback, we want to be as informative as possible so in some instances those in the SCI community may use/share the videos with others to help explain their own injury.

  • @rochelluneta5576
    @rochelluneta5576 3 года назад +9

    Im a hemiplegia for 2 yrs.

    • @shivaarmy6204
      @shivaarmy6204 3 года назад

      Yah problem mere dost ko Thi do Sal se aur aaj vah bilkul theek hai aap ko puchna Hai To yah mera number hai8287592332

    • @Ruddy00123
      @Ruddy00123 2 года назад

      Are you fine now?

    • @e-biotoriumhealthsoailders52
      @e-biotoriumhealthsoailders52 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/yJ38gQGnA90/видео.html

  • @My_Secret_ArtSketchbook
    @My_Secret_ArtSketchbook 2 года назад +1

    Can this be caused by stress

  • @1cOr1e
    @1cOr1e Год назад

    Connect the cells of the nervous system with the system of muscle cells into one. ?

  • @ronliebermann
    @ronliebermann Год назад

    Paralysis is a big subject, and it's clear that paralysis may have a variety of causes. But when it comes to paralysis resulting from a broken bone, the prognosis is not necessarily dire. What people need to understand is that a paralyzed person is worth two or three million dollars to the doctors, nurses, drug companies, and hospitals. So for the doctors, there's no reason to heal a paralyzed person. On the contrary, paralysis is wonderful, depending on who you are.
    There is an effective treatment for paralysis resulting from a severed nerve. And its simple. First, the broken bones need to be repositioned, so that the two broken nerve endings are as close to each other as possible. Within 1/16th of an inch. Then the patient needs three months of calcium, vitamins, and enzymes to recover from the physical damage.
    Bear in mind that the two nerve-endings aren't dead, in fact they are very much alive. But there are two issues. First, they have to be encouraged to grow, and they also have to be told in which direction to grow. There are two chemicals which serve as nerve growth agents: Epsom salt, and Vitamin E. If you inject these chemicals into the general vicinity of the two severed nerve-ends, both of them will start to grow immediately.
    The issue of guidance is handled with electrical acupuncture. One needle is placed into the end of one broken nerve, and the other needle is placed into the other side.
    Then a positive and negative electrical current is applied. Both ends of the growing nerve will follow this electrical path, and they will rejoin after a few weeks. But that's not the end of the story. It's only the beginning of the story. The rejoined nerve must be reprogrammed so that signals from the brain will reach the correct muscles. That means a year of physical therapy. But young paralyzed people can almost completely recover.
    And yes, I know what you're thinking. This described treatment is "pure speculation" which isn't established fact. But it is established fact.
    The British and U.S. governments have been hiding this treatment for decades. Remember that communism is based on the premise that life sucks; and that only political compliance will make it better. A paralyzed person is only MORE paralyzed than the rest of us. So we all need State intervention, at great expense. NHS could give you the lab results tommorow, if they wanted. But they won't.
    If you look at the NHS page below, concerning paralysis, note that they very carefully avoid any discussion of severed-nerve paralysis. Instead, they direct the reader's attention away from nerve-renewal into a "universe" of illnesses. The entire subject has been scrambled, because NHS is able to cure severed nerve paralysis. But there's no money in that.
    The real money is in the "mystical universe" of illness in general. And this is another reason why allowing England to continue as a nation would be a bad idea.
    England worships evil. We can't allow that cancer to spread.
    www.nhs.uk/conditions/paralysis/

  • @TebbyC
    @TebbyC 10 месяцев назад

    Paraplegia paralysis how do you cure it

  • @shardofglass
    @shardofglass 2 года назад +1

    Do you still feel pain in the paralyzed region?
    If so, does it hurt to move your legs (I mean with your hands/arms)

  • @bhagwattiwari2852
    @bhagwattiwari2852 2 года назад

    Any best doctor of hemiplegia in india,plz suggest me because I, m suffering from cervical spine injury cord contution C2-D3

    • @miatonxd170
      @miatonxd170 2 года назад

      Wish you the best

    • @outiskatrachid2603
      @outiskatrachid2603 2 года назад

      I have a brother who had paralysed for a 4 years from 2017 and he still, he had a complete injury in D3. I don't know if he will be could stand up or not.

  • @Angel_268
    @Angel_268 3 года назад

    Can a impinged nerve in cervical spine lead to paralysis over time?

    • @spinalcord3321
      @spinalcord3321  3 года назад

      We can't speak to specific questions like that but if you have a concern you should see a doctor, as spine issues may not get better over time without treatment.

  • @samuelsid3639
    @samuelsid3639 2 года назад +1

    Is paralysis related to genetics? Should I be concerned? My grandfather stayed paralysed for 14 years, he recently passed away due to a 2nd stroke, my mother had a paralysis stroke due to a clot, What can I do?

    • @Clarkkent163
      @Clarkkent163 Год назад

      No! It's got nothing to do with genetics, paralysis is when there's a lack of communication between the brain and body or actually the muscles aren't getting any control from the brain lets just say! We are only able to move because of muscle contraction which is caused by the nerves stimulating the muscles to control which is all fundamentally controlled by the human brain 🧠😇

    • @joannecarrel9907
      @joannecarrel9907 Год назад

      My name is Joanne and September 7th 2019 I fell and broke my neck and crushed my spinal cord is there anyone out there that can help me so that I can walk again able to feed myself what do I have to do to get help thank you

  • @wminion3890
    @wminion3890 8 месяцев назад

    Periodic Paralysis Hypokalemia.

  • @hildamejia2047
    @hildamejia2047 2 года назад

    objects pretending to be paraylize,,,milk cartons