Spasticity Management: What You Should Know

Spasticity is one of the most common secondary conditions after spinal cord injury — by most estimates it affects somewhere between two-thirds and three-quarters of people with SCI, and it is more common with cervical (neck) and incomplete injuries (per MSKTC). It shows up as increased muscle tightness, sudden involuntary contractions (spasms), exaggerated reflexes, rhythmic beating of a limb (clonus), or stiff joints that resist movement.

For some people it is mild stiffness. For others it is strong, unpredictable spasms that interfere with transfers, dressing, sleep, hygiene, or even breathing when the trunk or neck is involved. Spasticity is not automatically “bad” — many people put their tone to good use — but when it causes pain, skin breakdown, contractures, or safety risks, it needs active management.

The reassuring part: a layered plan of daily positioning, stretching, activity, and (when needed) medication or procedures keeps spasticity manageable for most people. The goal is rarely to eliminate all tone — it is to keep tone from getting in the way of your life and your health.

🚨 Red Flags — When to Seek Emergency Care

Contact your rehab physician or care team the same day, or go to the ER, if:

New spasticity appearing for the first time more than a year after injury, with no clear trigger, also deserves prompt evaluation — it can occasionally signal a syrinx (a fluid-filled cavity forming in the spinal cord) and should be checked (per MSKTC).

Tell any new medical team: “I have a spinal cord injury and spasticity that can be triggered by pain or infection below my level of injury.”

Understanding Spasticity

Knowing why spasticity happens makes the whole management menu make sense.

The brain normally keeps reflexes calm. A stretch reflex is the automatic tightening you get when a muscle is stretched quickly — the same reflex a doctor tests by tapping below your kneecap. Normally your brain sends steady “calm down” signals down the cord (called descending inhibition) so those reflexes don’t fire at every small movement (per SCIRE).

SCI interrupts that calming signal. When the cord is injured, the brain’s damping signal can’t get through. The upper motor neurons that carried it are impaired, so the reflex circuits inside the cord become over-active and fire on their own. The result is increased baseline tone plus spasms, jerks, and exaggerated reflexes (per MSKTC). Over months, the muscles and tendons themselves can also shorten and stiffen, adding to the problem.

It usually starts after spinal shock passes. In the first weeks after injury, reflexes below the level are often quiet (spinal shock). As that resolves, reflex activity returns — but over-responsive rather than normal (per Reeve).

Spasticity is speed-sensitive. It is different from ordinary muscle tightness: the faster a muscle is stretched, the more it resists. That is why quick movements, fast transfers, and clonus (a rhythmic tapping of the foot when weight hits the ball of the foot) are common triggers (per SCIRE).

Helpful tone vs. harmful tone

Spasticity sits on a spectrum, and the same tone can help one person and harm another.

The Noxious-Stimulus Check — Find the Trigger First

A sudden increase in spasticity almost always has a cause below your level of injury that your body can no longer feel as pain. Before adding or increasing treatment, run through this checklist — removing the trigger is often the fastest way to calm an acute flare (per MSKTC).

A spike in spasticity is information. Read it before you medicate it.

The Management Ladder — From Daily Habits to Procedures

Spasticity treatment is layered. It usually starts with the least invasive options (trigger control, stretching, positioning) and adds medication or procedures only if those aren’t enough. Most people end up combining several approaches, and finding the right mix is normal trial and error (per SCIRE). The sections below walk up that ladder.

Step 1 — Daily prevention and positioning

Step 2 — Safe stretching and movement

Step 3 — Splinting, casting, and orthoses

Step 4 — Activity-based and stimulation therapies

Step 5 — Oral medications (by class)

When physical measures aren’t enough — especially when spasticity is widespread — your doctor may add an oral medication. These are described here by class only; dosing belongs to your prescriber, and most are started low and adjusted slowly (per MSKTC).

Two safety points apply to all of them:

Step 6 — Focal injections

When only one muscle or a small group is the problem, your doctor may inject it directly — sparing you the whole-body side effects of oral drugs (per MSKTC).

Step 7 — Intrathecal baclofen pump

For severe, generalized spasticity that oral medication can’t control — or when oral side effects are intolerable — a baclofen pump delivers medication directly into the fluid around the spinal cord (per MSKTC).

Step 8 — Surgery (last resort)

Surgical options are reserved for established contractures or tone that nothing else controls, partly because some are not reversible (per MSKTC).

Your team will only raise these if simpler measures have genuinely run out, and will walk you through the trade-offs.

Measuring and Tracking Your Spasticity

You and your team can’t manage what you don’t measure. Spasticity changes with the day, the activity, and the years, so tracking it matters (per SCIRE).

When to Call Your Doctor or Rehab Team (Non-Emergency)

Travel, Work, and Community Adaptations

What Many People Find Helpful

Many people find a warm shower or bath before bed quiets nighttime spasms. Others keep a foam roller or therapy ball nearby for quick self-stretches during the day. Some notice that consistent standing or FES cycling lowers their baseline tone over weeks.

A simple “trigger card” in your wallet — your top three triggers and the first two things you do about them — saves time on a bad day and helps a new caregiver act fast.

The most consistent winners are the boring daily habits: a reliable bladder and bowel program, twice-daily skin checks, and the same stretching sequence morning and night. Because tone is often the first warning of a hidden problem, treat a new spasticity pattern as a prompt to investigate, not just something to ride out.

Evidence & Sources

Synthesized from MSKTC factsheets, SCIRE Community evidence summaries, PVA Consortium consumer guides, and Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation booklets (retrieved 2026-06-24). See RESEARCH-SOURCES.md for complete provenance and cross-bucket details. Mechanism and trigger detail draw heavily on the MSKTC “Spasticity and Spinal Cord Injury” factsheet and SCIRE’s spasticity summary; the treatment-ladder and self-care framing draw on the Reeve “Managing Spasticity” booklet (Second Edition).

Printable One-Pager Notes


You are the expert on your own tone. Most people with SCI find a stable, livable balance between too little and too much spasticity once they learn their personal triggers and build a short, repeatable daily routine. Keep this guide with your other self-care notes and review it whenever your pattern changes.

Sources & further reading

Last updated 2026-06-24