Blood Clots (DVT/PE): What You Should Know

After a spinal cord injury, your risk of dangerous blood clots is far higher than in the general population. In fact, without preventive blood thinners, more than half of people with a new SCI develop a clot, and clots are a leading cause of death in the first year after injury (per PVA). The risk is highest in the first weeks and months, but it can stay elevated for a long time.

The two main concerns are deep vein thrombosis (DVT) — a clot, usually in a deep vein of the leg or pelvis (occasionally an arm) — and pulmonary embolism (PE), when a piece of that clot breaks loose, travels through the bloodstream, and lodges in the lungs. A PE can be fatal within minutes.

The good news: with a consistent prevention plan, most clots can be avoided. Every person with SCI needs a clear, ongoing plan worked out with their rehab and medical team.

🚨 Red Flags — When to Seek Emergency Care

Call 911 or go to the ER immediately if you have any of these — they can come on suddenly:

Tell the ER team right away: “I have a spinal cord injury with paralysis and am at very high risk for blood clots. I need urgent evaluation for DVT or PE — please consider an ultrasound or CT.” If you take blood thinners or have had a clot before, say so immediately. A PE can be silent until it is severe, so do not wait to see if symptoms pass.

Why the Risk Is So High After SCI

Clots form when three things line up — and after SCI you often have all three at once (per PVA):

A few patterns are worth knowing. Clots happen most often in the first two weeks after injury, and the elevated risk is greatest over the first months. Leg DVT is more likely with a complete injury than an incomplete one, and more likely with paraplegia than tetraplegia — though clots in the lungs are not tied to those distinctions (per PVA). Even years out, risk climbs again any time prevention lapses: a long flight, a hospital stay, new immobility, surgery, or dehydration.

How a Clot Is Diagnosed

If you have symptoms, your team will image you rather than guess. Doppler ultrasound is usually the first test for a leg or arm clot — it’s accurate, painless, needs no preparation, and uses sound waves to measure blood flow. If ultrasound isn’t possible or a lung clot is suspected, a CT scan with contrast dye, a contrast venogram (an x-ray with dye), or a ventilation/perfusion (VQ) lung scan may be used instead (per PVA).

Doctors generally do not screen for clots in people without symptoms. Ultrasound misses many silent clots, and routine screening hasn’t been shown to prevent clots in the legs or lungs. That’s exactly why recognizing your own warning signs matters so much.

Daily and Ongoing Prevention

Work with your rehab physician, hematologist, or SCI specialist to build a plan for your individual risk. Common elements:

Recognizing a Clot When Sensation Is Altered

Many people with SCI have reduced or no feeling in the legs, so the classic “calf pain” may be absent — replaced by other clues:

If anything feels “off” in one leg compared with the other, get it checked the same day. Don’t wait for pain that may never come.

Travel and Long-Sitting Precautions

Long flights and long car rides raise clot risk for everyone, and more so after SCI (per PVA). Before and during a long trip:

Other Things That Raise Your Risk

Beyond immobility, several factors add to clot risk. Tell your doctor about any of these so your plan can be adjusted (per PVA):

If You Have a Clot: Treatment and What Changes

If a clot is confirmed, you’ll usually be started on blood thinners, unless the bleeding risk is more dangerous than the clot itself. How long depends on the clot (per PVA):

Less common options exist for specific situations: a “clot buster” (thrombolysis) that dissolves a clot, or a procedure to remove it (thrombectomy). These carry more bleeding risk, so they aren’t routine. An IVC filter — an umbrella-shaped net placed in the large vein in the abdomen to catch clots before they reach the lungs — is used mainly when blood thinners aren’t safe (active bleeding or high bleeding risk). Removable filters are often taken out after about eight weeks once the highest-risk period passes; if you have a removable filter in place under eight weeks, ask your doctor about removing it (per PVA).

Living on blood thinners. Know your bleeding signs: heavier-than-usual menstrual bleeding, cuts that are slow to stop, bleeding gums or nose, or more frequent nosebleeds — call your doctor about any of these. Many everyday over-the-counter medicines change how blood thinners work, including aspirin, ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin), naproxen (Aleve), Alka-Seltzer, and Excedrin — clear every medication with your doctor (per PVA). If you’re on warfarin (Coumadin), you’ll need regular blood tests, and foods high in vitamin K affect the dose. Newer oral thinners such as apixaban (Eliquis), dabigatran (Pradaxa), and rivaroxaban (Xarelto) don’t have that food interaction. You can return to therapy and physical activity after a clot — once you’ve been started on treatment.

After a leg DVT, some people develop post-thrombotic syndrome — ongoing swelling, heaviness, aching, skin hardening or darkening, visible veins, or skin breakdown in that leg (per PVA). Mention any of these to your team. You’ll also need clear guidance on what to do if you bleed, need surgery, or become pregnant while on blood thinners.

What Many People Find Helpful

Evidence & Sources

Synthesized from PVA Consortium consumer guides, MSKTC factsheets, and SCIRE Community evidence summaries (retrieved 2026-06-24). See RESEARCH-SOURCES.md for complete provenance and cross-bucket details. Primary clinical detail on incidence, timing, mechanical and pharmacologic prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and recognition in the SCI population draws heavily from the PVA Blood Clots: What You Should Know Consumer Guide.

Printable One-Pager Notes


Blood clots are one of the few complications after SCI that can kill quickly and quietly. Consistent prevention — mechanical, blood thinners when prescribed, movement, and hydration — works. Know your personal risk window and your exact prevention plan. If anything changes in your mobility, medications, or travel, ask your team whether your clot prevention needs adjusting. Keep this guide where you and anyone who helps you can find it fast. When in doubt about a symptom, get checked the same day.

Sources & further reading

Last updated 2026-06-24

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