Respiratory Management: What You Should Know
Breathing and clearing secretions are fundamental to staying healthy after a spinal cord injury. The higher and more complete your injury, the more likely it is that the muscles you use to breathe and cough are weak or paralyzed. That raises the risk of pneumonia, atelectasis (collapsed lung segments), and respiratory failure — highest in the first weeks and months, but the risk never fully goes away.
Good respiratory care is not just for people on ventilators. Almost everyone with a cervical or high thoracic injury benefits from a deliberate daily program to keep the lungs clear and the breathing muscles strong. The payoff is fewer hospital stays, more energy, and the freedom to live fully. Respiratory illness is the leading cause of death after SCI, so this is one of the most important habits you can build. If you depend on a ventilator or tracheostomy day-to-day, pair this guide with the companion Long-term Ventilation Care guide, which covers equipment, caregiver training, and power-backup planning in depth.
🚨 Red Flags — When to Seek Emergency Care
Call 911 or go to the ER immediately if:
- You have increasing shortness of breath, rapid breathing, or you are using your neck and shoulder muscles to breathe (accessory muscle use).
- Your lips, fingertips, or nail beds turn blue or gray (cyanosis).
- You have a fever, a productive cough with thick yellow, green, or bloody mucus, or chest pain when you breathe.
- You feel confused, unusually sleepy, or have a severe headache that does not match your usual pattern (a possible sign of carbon-dioxide buildup).
- You suddenly cannot clear secretions even with your usual cough assist or suctioning.
- You are on noninvasive ventilation or a ventilator and your oxygen saturation drops below your baseline or your machine alarms repeatedly.
Tell the ER or ICU team right away: “I have a spinal cord injury at [level] and cannot cough or breathe normally. I need urgent airway clearance and a respiratory assessment.” Bring your own equipment (cough assist machine, suction catheter, oximeter) if you have it.
Act on the first sign of trouble, not the worst. What is a minor cold for someone else can become pneumonia within hours when you cannot cough hard enough to clear your lungs.
How Your Injury Level Affects Breathing and Coughing
Three muscle groups drive breathing, and each is controlled from a different part of the spine (per MSKTC):
- The diaphragm — the dome-shaped muscle under your lungs and your main muscle for breathing in. It is controlled by the upper-to-mid cervical cord (C3–C5).
- The intercostal muscles between your ribs, which help the chest expand and empty. They are controlled across the thoracic cord (T1–T11).
- The abdominal muscles over your belly, controlled lower in the thoracic cord (T7–T12). These provide most of the force you need to cough — which is why a strong, effective cough is often the first thing SCI takes away.
Because of this, your level of injury shapes what kind of help you need:
- Above C3–C4 — most or all of the nerves that drive the breathing muscles may be affected, and ongoing ventilation (or a diaphragm pacing system) is usually needed. See the Long-term Ventilation Care guide.
- C3–C5 — a mid-cervical injury may leave some breathing muscle intact. Many people breathe on their own at least part of the time, but cough is weak (per PVA).
- Below C5 — people often breathe without a ventilator, but cough is still weakened and the risk of future respiratory complications stays high, so regular follow-up matters.
- Thoracic injuries — the diaphragm is intact, but losing intercostal and abdominal control still reduces cough force. The lower your thoracic level, the more abdominal and intercostal muscle you keep (per MSKTC).
A complete injury usually means full loss of muscle control below your level; an incomplete injury may leave some, all, or none. People with both a higher level and a complete injury are at the greatest risk and benefit most from an aggressive daily program.
A weak or absent cough means mucus, saliva, and food particles do not clear well. Secretions pool, bacteria grow, and pneumonia can develop quickly — especially if you also tend to aspirate (inhale food, drink, or saliva “the wrong way”) (per SCIRE).
Daily Respiratory Care Program (Non-Ventilator)
Most people with cervical or high thoracic SCI need some version of this routine every day, for life. Build it around your bowel and bladder programs so it becomes automatic.
Airway clearance
- Do a full clearance session each morning and again before bed, plus extra rounds whenever you feel secretions building.
- Use assisted (“quad”) coughing — a trained helper pushes inward and upward on your abdomen as you try to cough, adding the force your abdominal muscles can’t. Have a nurse or therapist teach the technique and the right amount of force before anyone does it alone (per PVA).
- Ask your team about a mechanical cough assist machine (an insufflator-exsufflator, or “cough machine”). It gently pushes air in, then pulls it out fast to clear the airway. It is often more effective and less invasive than suctioning, and it can dislodge mucus or food when paired with an assisted cough (per PVA).
- Add postural drainage, chest percussion or vibration, and suctioning if your team prescribes them.
Breathing exercises
- Practice slow, deep diaphragmatic breaths through the day to keep air sacs open.
- Use an incentive spirometer if you have one — a simple device that rewards a strong breath in and encourages you to work your lungs (per PVA).
- Ask whether inspiratory muscle training fits your level (see its own section below).
Positioning
- Sit upright as much as you can during the day — it is the position in which your lungs work best.
- In bed, change positions often and use slight head-of-bed elevation to reduce aspiration risk.
Secretion monitoring
- Know your normal amount, color, and thickness. Any increase, new color, or new odor is an early warning sign.
Hydration and weight
- Stay well hydrated unless your team has restricted fluids — water helps loosen mucus so it clears more easily (per SCIRE).
- Work toward a healthy weight. Extra weight is linked to more respiratory problems, including sleep-disordered breathing (per MSKTC).
Do not smoke or vape
- Smoking and vaping — including marijuana — damage the lungs’ ability to fight infection and worsen nearly every respiratory risk. Avoid secondhand smoke too. People with weak breathing muscles should not smoke (per MSKTC).
Preventing Lung Infections
Respiratory infections are common after SCI and tend to hit harder. Two reasons combine: a weakened cough lets mucus pool and breed bacteria, and many people develop a weakened immune response after injury (per SCIRE). Prevention is your best defense.
Vaccinations
- Get a flu shot every year. It lowers your risk and can make the flu milder if you do catch it.
- Get a pneumonia (pneumococcal) vaccine — pneumonia and related lung infections are among the leading causes of death after SCI. Ask your provider which vaccines and timing are right for you, since recommendations depend on your history (per MSKTC).
- Stay current on the COVID-19 vaccine, and get the RSV vaccine if you are 60 or older (per MSKTC).
- Always confirm vaccine timing with your own physician (per PVA).
Everyday infection control
- Wash your hands often with soap and water for 20–30 seconds (per SCIRE).
- Wipe down high-touch surfaces, including your wheelchair joystick and pushrims.
- Avoid people who are sick during cold, flu, and COVID season, and let those around you know early when you feel unwell.
- If you use a cough assist, suction, or ventilator equipment, keep it clean and replace filters and tubing as directed — dirty equipment grows bacteria.
Catch infections early
- Most pneumonia begins as a simple upper-respiratory infection, so treat every cold seriously: step up your clearance sessions and call your team early (per SCIRE).
- Watch for fever or chills, a new or worsening cough, thick or discolored mucus, chest tightness, or shortness of breath (per MSKTC).
- Symptoms can be atypical after SCI. Because coughing is often impaired, a cough may be absent — sometimes the only early clue is a fever or just feeling weaker than usual (per SCIRE).
Inspiratory Muscle Training
If your injury leaves some breathing muscle intact, training it can help. Inspiratory muscle training (IMT) uses a small handheld device that makes breathing in harder while letting you breathe out freely, so the muscles work against resistance and grow stronger (per SCIRE).
- Devices range from simple resistive trainers (you breathe through narrow holes) to spring-loaded threshold trainers that give steady resistance whether you breathe fast or slow (per SCIRE).
- A typical program runs sessions of about 30 minutes, 2 to 3 times a day, for at least 6 weeks, then continues regularly to keep the gains — like any strength training (per SCIRE).
- Who benefits most: people with mid-cervical to mid-thoracic injuries, who tend to have both breathing problems and trainable muscle. Very high cervical injuries usually need ventilation support instead (per SCIRE).
- Evidence: studies show IMT can improve the strength and endurance of the breathing muscles, and it may reduce shortness of breath and chest infections in some people (per SCIRE).
- Safety: start only under guidance. It may not suit you if you have unstable asthma, a recent or unhealed collapsed lung, or a low tolerance for breathlessness. Train at the right pace — breathing too fast can cause dizziness or fainting (per SCIRE).
If you have limited hand function, a helper can hold the trainer, or you can tilt your chair back to steady the mouthpiece.
Abdominal Binders
An abdominal binder is a snug elastic wrap worn around the lower belly, usually under your shirt. When abdominal muscles are weak, the diaphragm tends to sit too low to work well; the binder gently compresses the abdomen and helps push the diaphragm into a better position to breathe (per SCIRE).
- What it can do: studies in people with tetraplegia show binders can improve the ability to inhale and exhale, and some people find breathing feels easier. Binders also help steady blood pressure when you move from lying to sitting, and may make speech louder and clearer (per SCIRE). Some people also use one to support sitting balance or reduce the forward sag sometimes called “quad belly.”
- Fit: it should be snug enough to support you but never so tight it hurts or restricts your ribs. A common landmark is to set the lower edge level with the pubic bone, just above the genitals (per SCIRE).
- Introduce it gradually and have your team guide how it is used in your case — both PVA and SCIRE stress that the right approach is individual (per PVA).
- Cautions: check the skin underneath regularly for redness or breakdown, take care around any stoma, and don’t over-tighten — too tight can limit breathing, increase spasticity, or even trigger autonomic dysreflexia in some people (per SCIRE).
Sleep-Disordered Breathing
Sleep apnea and shallow nighttime breathing are common after SCI and easy to miss, because they happen while you sleep. Two patterns occur: obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), where the airway collapses and briefly blocks airflow, and sleep-related hypoventilation, where breathing is too shallow or slow and carbon dioxide builds up (per MSKTC).
Watch for these signs and mention them to your provider:
- Someone tells you that you stop breathing at night.
- Loud snoring, or restless sleep where you wake choking or gasping.
- Waking with a dry or sore throat, or a headache.
- Daytime fatigue or sleepiness, or not feeling rested after sleep.
Risk is higher if you snore, carry extra weight, are male or a postmenopausal woman, drink alcohol, take opioids or muscle relaxants, or have a small jaw (per MSKTC). Left untreated, sleep-disordered breathing is linked to high blood pressure, heart problems, stroke, diabetes, and depression. A sleep study can sort out what is happening; treatment may be a CPAP or BiPAP machine, supplemental oxygen, or a combination (per MSKTC).
When to Call Your Pulmonologist or Rehab Team (Non-Emergency)
- Your usual secretions increase or change color for more than 48 hours, or you are suctioning or doing cough assist more often than normal.
- You feel more short of breath than usual during everyday activities.
- You snore loudly, wake gasping, or feel unrested — ask about a sleep study.
- You want to discuss a cough assist machine, inspiratory muscle trainer, abdominal binder, or other equipment.
- You are planning surgery, anesthesia, or any procedure that affects your breathing.
- You are due for your annual respiratory checkup — see your provider yearly to catch problems early, and more often if you also have asthma or COPD (per MSKTC).
Travel and Hospital Tips
- Travel with your full respiratory kit (cough assist, suction, spare circuits, batteries, medications) in carry-on luggage, plus a doctor’s letter explaining your equipment.
- When hospitalized for any reason, ask to be seen early by a respiratory therapy team familiar with SCI — don’t wait for problems to appear.
- Some people keep a portable pulse oximeter and check it daily or whenever they feel “off.”
- If you depend on a ventilator or tracheostomy, your travel and emergency planning is more involved — see the Long-term Ventilation Care guide.
What Many People Find Helpful
- Treat your cough assist or assisted-cough routine as seriously as your bladder program. Skipping it for even one day with a cold can lead to hospitalization.
- Many people do a full clearance session first thing in the morning and again before bed, with extra rounds whenever secretions build.
- Keep a “respiratory diary” during cold and flu season — tracking secretions, energy, and symptoms helps you and your team spot trouble early.
- If you have a caregiver, make sure at least two trained people (plus a backup) know your exact clearance technique and your emergency plan.
- Many people with marginal cough strength notice that an abdominal binder during clearance sessions adds useful cough force.
- A simple fever or “just feeling weaker” can be your only early sign of infection. Trust it and call early — being aggressive beats waiting.
Evidence & Sources
Synthesized from the PVA Consortium for Spinal Cord Medicine consumer guide on respiratory management, the MSKTC factsheet on respiratory health and SCI, and SCIRE Community evidence handouts on infectious respiratory conditions, inspiratory muscle training, and abdominal binders (retrieved 2026-06-24). See RESEARCH-SOURCES.md for complete provenance and cross-bucket details. Primary guidance on assisted coughing, secretion management, and pneumonia prevention draws heavily on the PVA Respiratory Management Consumer Guide and the MSKTC factsheet; the inspiratory-muscle-training, abdominal-binder, and infection-prevention detail draws on the corresponding SCIRE Community summaries.
Printable One-Pager Notes
- Target length for a single printed page: 950–1250 words; this guide runs longer for completeness — print the Red Flags block plus the daily program and infection-prevention sections if space is tight.
- Keep the Red Flags block highly prominent — respiratory emergencies move fast in SCI.
- Use 11–12 pt body text and generous line spacing when printing from the site renderer.
- The emoji heading (🚨) prints on modern printers; if yours drops emojis, write “RED FLAGS — EMERGENCY” by hand at the top.
- Consider space for a simple “daily clearance checklist” if the future renderer supports tables or icons.
Your lungs and your ability to clear them are as important as your heart or your bladder after a high-level SCI. A consistent, aggressive airway clearance program prevents most pneumonias and keeps you out of the hospital. Know your baseline, act at the first sign of change, and make sure everyone who helps you is trained on your exact routine and equipment. Keep this guide where you and your caregivers can find it in seconds. When in doubt about your breathing, get help the same hour — not the next day.