Many people have a simple and clear mental image of the symptoms of a spinal cord injury. A physician with extensive experience in spinal cord injuries is more likely to say, “it depends.”
Among the most common and maybe most harmful myths is that a spinal cord injury, like spilling a cup of coffee, happens in split second and is immediately obvious. The truth is that these injuries may seem, at first, to be another kind of injury entirely, or no injury at all.
A variety of symptoms come with injuries of different severity and different locations along the spine. Some have to do with the spine more obviously than others.
The time between the accident and professional treatment often decides the long-term amount of recovery, so it is important to be alert and take extreme precautions as soon as possible.
Whether they cause expected or unexpected symptoms, spinal cord injuries require immediate, high-quality medical attention.
Some signs lead many people to suspect a spinal cord injury right away:
Other signs might not strike most people as having to do with the spine:
Like any part of the body, the spinal cord can be in shock right after an injury. Swelling or bleeding can change the symptoms with time, so the injury may not be obvious at first.
Knowing the full extent and type of injury requires a qualified medical professional.
There are many takeaways to draw from all of this. One is clearly that you should wait for complete, professional and time-tested information about the injuries and their financial consequences before you consider settling with an insurance company and signing a release of liability.
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