• PURPOSE OF REVIEW
    • Spinal cord injury is a devastating acute neurological condition with loss of function and poor long-term prognosis. This review summarizes current management strategies and innovative concepts on the horizon.
  • RECENT FINDINGS
    • The routine use of steroids in patients with spinal cord injuries has been largely abandoned and considered a 'harmful standard of care'. Prospective trials have shown that early spine stabilization within 24  h results in decreased secondary complication rates. Neuronal plasticity and axonal regeneration in the adult spinal cord are limited due to myelin-associated inhibitory molecules, such as Nogo-A. The experimental inhibition of Nogo-A ameliorates axonal sprouting and functional recovery in animal models.
  • SUMMARY
    • General management strategies for acute spinal cord injury consist of protection of airway, breathing, oxygenation and control of blood loss with maintenance of blood pressure. Unstable spine fractures should be stabilized early to allow unrestricted mobilization of patients with spinal cord injuries and to decrease preventable complications. Steroids are largely considered obsolete and have been abandoned in clinical guidelines. Nogo-A represents a promising new pharmacological target to promote sprouting of injured axons and restore function. Prospective clinical trials of Nogo-A inhibition in patients with spinal cord injuries are currently under way.