A spinal cord injury can be almost fatal to a person. A person who was alive and kicking suddenly can’t move both lower limbs. This is called paraplegia. If it is a cervical spine injury, the limbs can not move, this is called quadriplegia. A strong, strong, strong man can become a burden to his family and society in an instant, and become the object of help from his family and society. Can you accept this fact, or can I accept it, but the patient cannot accept it anyway. So is there a remedy? Can we save the patient from the fire, so that the patient can see a ray of hope? There is only one answer to this question, and that is “rehabilitation”. We know that central nervous system injury is not regenerative, especially spinal cord injury, broken is broken, it is not regenerative. So, what is the use of rehabilitation after spinal cord injury? There is only one purpose of rehabilitation; to improve the patient’s general condition and improve the quality of life. We know: regardless of the stage of spinal cord injury, there are some patients who are not completely injured, and many of them can regain some walking ability after a long period of hard rehabilitation training under the guidance of experienced rehabilitation physicians. For those patients with complete injury, our responsibility is to reduce the complications and improve the quality of life, so that the patients can take care of themselves with the help of braces and wheelchairs, so that they can no longer involve their families, or rarely involve their families, and do all the things they can do by themselves, or even engage in some light work, and reintegrate into society and return to their families, work and study. After spinal cord injury, besides the inability to move the limbs, many complications may occur, such as muscle atrophy, joint contracture, osteoporosis, heterotopic ossification, deep vein embolism, lung infection, urinary tract infection, urinary stones, defecation disorder, urinary disorder, decubitus ulcer, etc. Patients with high level injury will have reflex bladder, with inability to retain urine, dripping urine, incomplete urination, eventually making the bladder smaller, and will also have complications such as urinary stones. Patients with low spinal cord injury have a weak bladder, where they cannot urinate when they have urine and need to use their abdominal muscles or external force to get it out. This type of patient can also affect the function of the kidneys if they cannot urinate for a long time, which can be life-threatening. In the case of women, it can also lead to complications such as uterine prolapse due to the frequent use of abdominal muscle force. Patients with cervical injury are more severely injured, but as long as the injury is below cervical 7, they can achieve self-care with regular rehabilitation. However, patients with higher cervical injuries, especially those with injuries above cervical 5, will have more severe symptoms. Due to the loss of cervical sympathetic innervation, these patients are prone to autonomic hyperreflexia and other complications. For example, blood pressure may suddenly rise or fall, and the heart rhythm may become abnormal, and antihypertensive drugs and antiarrhythmic drugs may not work. When the body temperature rises, antipyretics do not work, and so on. Therefore, even if these patients are hospitalized, they can only get good results with the participation of a rehabilitation physician. Some people see rehabilitation of spinal cord injury as impossible. It is thought that as long as the spinal cord is injured, there is no cure. In fact, there is a lot of promise in this area. As rehabilitation physicians, we want every patient to be able to recover under our own treatment, or at the very least, to achieve maximum self-care. After the patient arrives, we will do various rehabilitation assessments to find out where the spinal cord injury is, whether it is complete or incomplete, and what complications there are, so that we can develop a practical rehabilitation program and tell the patient what kind of result is expected to be achieved, so that the patient can understand his disease and build up his confidence to overcome it. The patient will have the confidence to overcome the disease and cooperate with the doctor to achieve the best treatment results. In fact, we can also see in the news reports, for example, the gymnast Sanglan neck injury, after regular rehabilitation training, can also be a TV sports show host. The patients we have cured here are even more eye-opening. Some patients with incomplete cervical medullary injury, who could not move their limbs at all at the beginning, could not only walk more than 10 meters by themselves without assistance after more than a year of our treatment, but even went on vacation with their families abroad. Some patients with incomplete cervical 7 injury could not even sit up at the beginning, but after nearly a year of rehabilitation, they can already take steps on their own. More patients with cervical, thoracic, and lumbar medullary injuries have achieved self-care after systematic rehabilitation, and have started a new life. Let’s take a look at what kind of prognosis spinal cord injury patients can achieve after formal rehabilitation. Patients with cervical 6 and 7 injuries can use wheelchairs. Patients with cervical 8 to thoracic 1 injuries can drive a car. Patients with a thoracic 6 injury can walk with a brace on crutches if their upper back muscles are functioning well. Patients with a thoracic 12 injury can walk up and down steps with a brace to support their crutches if they have good function of their thoracic dorsal muscles. Patients with lumbar 3 injury can walk with a short leg brace. Patients with sacral 1 injury can walk normally.