Women’s Health After SCI: What You Should Know
Women with spinal cord injury have the same fundamental reproductive health needs as any other woman — menstruation, contraception, pregnancy, childbirth, menopause, and gynecological screening. SCI does not take those away. What it adds is a layer of specific considerations: autonomic dysreflexia (AD) for injuries at T6 and above, reduced sensation that can hide pain or problems, higher baseline risk for urinary tract infection, skin breakdown, and blood clots, and practical barriers to routine exams.
The single most reassuring fact is also the most important: fertility in women is typically preserved, and most women can carry a pregnancy to full term and deliver a healthy baby. The key is proactive communication with a care team that understands SCI, and realistic preparation for the ways your body may respond differently — including the ways it may not warn you that something is wrong.
This guide covers women-specific reproductive and gynecological health. For the general picture of sexual function, arousal, and intimacy after SCI, see the sexuality-after-sci guide. For AD recognition and first aid, see the autonomic-dysreflexia guide — this guide cross-references it rather than repeating it.
🚨 Red Flags — When to Seek Emergency Care
Call 911 or get to emergency care immediately if you experience:
- Signs of autonomic dysreflexia during pregnancy or labor (T6 and above): a sudden pounding headache, a sharp spike in blood pressure, flushing or sweating above the injury, nasal congestion, or blurred vision. AD in pregnancy or labor is a medical emergency. Follow your AD first-aid steps (sit upright, find and remove the trigger) — see the autonomic-dysreflexia guide — and tell the team it may be AD, not only preeclampsia.
- Severe headache with high blood pressure during pregnancy. AD and preeclampsia can look alike and can occur together. Both are dangerous and need urgent evaluation — do not assume it is “just” one or the other.
- Signs of preterm labor — because you may not feel contractions, watch for low back pressure, pelvic heaviness, fluid leakage, regular tightening you can see or feel, or unexplained new AD episodes, which can be your body signaling labor you cannot feel.
- Heavy vaginal bleeding, severe pelvic or abdominal pain, or a noticeable drop in your baby’s movement during pregnancy.
- Fever, marked increase in spasticity, cloudy or foul-smelling urine, or flank/back pain — a urinary tract or kidney infection, which carries higher stakes during pregnancy.
- Signs of a blood clot — new swelling, warmth, redness, or firmness in one leg, or sudden shortness of breath or chest pain.
Understanding the Difference: Why SCI Changes Women’s Health Care
Two facts drive nearly everything in this guide.
First, you may not feel pain that would normally warn you of a problem. A gynecological infection, an ovarian cyst, early labor, or a developing pressure injury may not produce the discomfort that prompts another woman to seek care. This is why scheduled, routine screening matters more after SCI, not less (per PVA).
Second, for injuries at T6 and above, autonomic dysreflexia is the recurring high-stakes thread — through device use, gynecological exams, pregnancy, and especially labor. Your body can mount a dangerous blood-pressure surge in response to a trigger below the injury that you cannot feel.
Menstruation After SCI
Many women have a temporary pause in their periods after spinal cord injury. Menstruation usually returns within a few months — commonly around six months, though it varies (per PVA). When periods come back they may be irregular at first.
A few things to know:
- You can become pregnant before your period returns. Fertility can resume before menstruation does, so if you are not trying to conceive, start reliable contraception promptly (per Reeve).
- Low body weight or low body mass index — common after SCI from muscle loss — can affect how regular your cycles are.
- Premenstrual and menstrual symptoms may feel more intense than before injury. Cramping pain (dysmenorrhea) can become sharper or more nauseating; your physician can recommend appropriate treatment (classes of anti-inflammatory medication; specifics are a clinical decision).
- Talk with your physician if your periods have not returned within about six months, or sooner if you have other concerns.
Managing menstrual hygiene
- Work with your rehab team or occupational therapist before you finish initial rehabilitation to figure out the easiest way to manage tampons, pads, or cups given your hand function and transfers.
- If you cannot manipulate products yourself, practice clear instructions for attendants or a partner before you leave rehab.
- Track your cycle once it returns so you can anticipate symptoms and changes in spasticity or mood.
Fertility — A Key Reassurance
For women, fertility is typically preserved after SCI. Ovulation continues (or resumes), and pregnancy is possible — including, as above, before your period comes back (per Reeve). This is different from the male picture, where ejaculation and sperm motility are often affected; that side is covered in the sexuality-after-sci guide.
In practical terms: if you want to conceive, your timeline is usually your own to plan with your team. If you want to avoid pregnancy, do not rely on the absence of periods as protection.
Gynecological Care and Screening
Gynecological concerns themselves are largely the same as for women without SCI. What changes is detection and access (per PVA).
- Keep routine exams on schedule — pelvic exams, Pap screening, and breast exams at the intervals recommended for your age. Because you may not feel the warning pain that prompts an urgent visit, these scheduled exams are your main line of defense against problems that develop quietly.
- Ask about accessibility when you book. Confirm there is a height-adjustable exam table and an accessible office, and ask whether the provider has experience caring for women with disabilities.
- Plan the transfer and positioning in advance. A pelvic exam may need extra time, an assisted transfer, or adapted positioning; saying so when you schedule lets the office prepare.
- For T6 and above, flag your AD risk. A pelvic exam is a stimulus below the level of injury and can trigger AD. Tell the provider before the exam so they can monitor and stop if needed (see the autonomic-dysreflexia guide).
Breast health
- Follow the same breast screening guidelines (clinical exams and mammograms) as other women your age.
- Reduced or absent breast sensation means you, a partner, or a caregiver may need to do manual checks for lumps or changes rather than relying on feel.
- Transfers onto and positioning for mammography may need adaptation — tell the imaging center about your SCI in advance.
- If arm and hand function affects self-exam technique, ask your provider for an adapted method.
Contraception Considerations
All of the usual methods are available, but a few SCI-specific factors should shape the choice. Discuss these with your gynecologist or rehab physician (per PVA):
- Circulation and clot risk. Paralysis already raises the risk of blood clots, and estrogen-containing (combined) hormonal methods add to that clot risk — a serious, potentially life-threatening concern. Progestin-only options may be more appropriate for some women. Any hormonal method should be prescribed with that caution in mind (per Reeve).
- Sensation and infection detection. With reduced pelvic sensation, you may not feel pain that would otherwise flag a complication. Intrauterine devices carry a higher risk of pelvic inflammatory disease, and a problem with an internal device may be harder to detect — a factor to weigh, not an automatic exclusion. Insertion may need special positioning.
- Dexterity and skin. Barrier methods need hand function or partner assistance. Some methods (for example a diaphragm) can irritate vaginal tissue — relevant when sensation can’t warn you of irritation.
- Permanent options. Some couples consider sterilization after completing their family; be sure of that decision, since it is permanent.
Emergency contraception remains available if needed. The classes and concepts above are for discussion with your provider — specific products and doses are clinical decisions, not something to self-select.
Pregnancy After SCI
Women with SCI can and do have healthy pregnancies. Research has even found that quality of life for women with SCI tends to increase after childbirth — the positives generally outweigh the added demands (per PVA). Successful pregnancies are somewhat more common in women who are younger at the time of injury and of pregnancy, though good outcomes occur across a wide range of ages and injury levels (per Reeve).
Pregnancy does raise the risk of several SCI-related complications, so it should be planned and closely monitored.
Before pregnancy
- Get pre-pregnancy counseling from an obstetrician experienced with SCI (or a high-risk/maternal-fetal medicine specialist). Start prenatal care as soon as you decide to conceive.
- Optimize bladder and bowel routines, skin care, nutrition, and bone health beforehand.
- Review all medications for pregnancy safety with your team — do not stop or change anything on your own.
During pregnancy — what to expect and monitor
- Urinary tract infections. Already a higher baseline risk; pregnancy adds to it. Keep close to your bladder routine and report symptoms early. See the bladder-management guide rather than re-teaching it here.
- Skin breakdown and pressure injuries. Weight gain, shifting body shape, and harder transfers raise the risk — monitor skin regularly and adjust seating and cushions as your body changes.
- Blood clots. Paralysis and pregnancy each raise clot risk; together the concern is real. Watch for the leg and breathing red flags above.
- Respiratory function. A growing uterus can affect breathing, especially with higher injuries or ventilator use.
- Bladder and bowel changes. Programs often need adjusting — for example, an indwelling catheter may need to replace intermittent catheterization at some point, and bowel routines may shift. Plan this with your team.
- Mobility, transfers, and equipment. Techniques that worked before pregnancy may stop working as your size, shape, and weight distribution change. Expect to adjust your wheelchair, seating, transfer methods, and possibly your bed; err on the side of caution. Joints are more vulnerable in the last trimester.
- Autonomic dysreflexia. AD is a particular concern throughout pregnancy for T6 and above, and the stakes rise at delivery (see below).
Labor and Delivery — The Autonomic Dysreflexia Risk
This is the highest-stakes part of the guide. For many women with SCI at T6 and above, autonomic dysreflexia is the most serious complication of labor and delivery (per PVA).
A few critical points, grounded carefully:
- Your body responds to childbirth even if you cannot feel it. The contractions, cervical changes, and delivery are all stimuli below the level of injury — so labor itself can trigger AD, even when you feel no pain (per Reeve).
- AD in labor can look like — and can coexist with — preeclampsia. AD and preeclampsia share signs such as high blood pressure, and both occur in pregnancy. Both are serious emergencies. Your obstetric team must understand the difference and know what to do if either appears (per PVA). Treating one while missing the other is the danger.
- You may not feel labor starting. Because labor pains may be absent, learn the signs that labor has begun, and know that a new or unexplained AD episode can itself be a signal. Some women with SCI are advised to be hospitalized before labor begins — discuss this plan with your obstetrician (per PVA).
- There is an increased risk of premature labor and delivery (per Reeve).
What to put in place beforehand
- Choose an obstetrician (and, ideally, an anesthesia and nursing team) experienced with SCI. An experienced OB/GYN makes labor and delivery less risky and less anxiety-producing (per Reeve).
- Discuss pain and AD management before labor. The sources are clear that you should plan AD management and discuss anesthesia/pain management with your physician in advance (per Reeve). (General guidance, beyond what these consumer sources specify: regional anesthesia such as an epidural is widely used in obstetric practice to help blunt the AD-triggering stimulus during labor for women with high injuries — confirm the specifics of your plan with your own obstetric and anesthesia team.)
- Write a birth plan that spells out your SCI history, AD triggers, and the team’s recognition-and-response plan, and share it with everyone caring for you, well in advance.
Both vaginal delivery and cesarean section are possible; the right choice depends on your individual situation and is made with your team. Most women with SCI are able to carry to term and deliver (per Reeve).
After Delivery
- Postpartum depression is possible, as it is for any new mother — and worth knowing about in advance. If you feel persistently sad or hopeless, or have thoughts of harming yourself or your baby, contact your provider right away; effective treatment exists (per PVA).
- Expect temporary changes in bladder, bowel, and pelvic-floor function after delivery, and ease back into your established routines with your team.
- Adaptive breastfeeding and infant-care positioning are well-trodden ground; peers and occupational therapists are good sources of practical setups.
Menopause
Menopause occurs at roughly the same average age as in the general population, and research shows no significant differences in menopausal symptoms between women with and without SCI — though, as for anyone, timing and symptoms vary widely (per PVA).
The SCI-specific wrinkle is overlap: hot flashes, mood changes, sleep disruption, headaches, and temperature swings can resemble injury-related symptoms — and, for T6 and above, can be confused with AD. Because of this overlap, bring any symptom you think might be menopause to your physician, so the cause can be sorted out and treated correctly rather than assumed.
Two practical notes:
- Bone health. Bone density loss accelerates after menopause and is already a concern after SCI; discuss screening and prevention with your team.
- Vaginal comfort. Dryness and changes in comfort can occur; water-based lubricants and other options may help. Keep up routine pelvic exams and screening through and after the transition.
The Mental-Health Picture for Women with SCI
Women’s mental health deserves direct attention, not a footnote. Spinal cord injury roughly doubles the risk of mental-health difficulty, and women with disabilities experience depression at about twice the rate of men — driven in large part by barriers to health care, employment, and the extra time and effort daily life requires (per Reeve).
What this looks like in practice:
- Adjustment takes time, and it isn’t linear. Many women move through stages resembling grief — confusion, denial, anger and depression, testing limits, and acceptance — and may revisit them around major transitions like returning to work, a relationship change, or becoming a mom (per Reeve).
- Depression can surface weeks, months, or even years later — often after the structure of rehab ends and you are home with your own thoughts. Physical signs (worsening pain, sleep and appetite changes, exhaustion, “brain fog”) can mask it. Loss of sexual interest is not the same as loss of sexual function — either can be present without the other.
- PTSD, stress, and body-image strain are common. A traumatic injury can drive post-traumatic stress; cultural images that rarely portray women with disabilities as attractive or capable can erode body image and self-esteem.
- It improves, and it is treatable. As independence returns, mood often lifts. Talking to a mental-health professional, and considering therapy and/or medication, are normal and effective steps — not a failure of coping.
This guide stays women-specific; for the general adjustment and depression picture, also see the adjustment and mental-health guides.
What Many People Find Helpful
Women who have navigated reproductive health, pregnancy, and menopause with SCI tend to emphasize the same two things: preparation and self-advocacy. Build relationships with providers who respect your expertise about your own body and your SCI, and do not settle for a team that treats your disability as a reason to offer less.
Connect with peers. Peer mentors and community groups are repeatedly cited as one of the most valuable resources — for practical wisdom that even good clinicians may not relay (positioning for exams, managing AD in labor, adaptive infant care) and for the simple reality of talking to someone who has been there (per Reeve).
Tend your support system and relationships deliberately. Couples weather an SCI better the more time they spend communicating and doing things together; a strong network — partner, friends, family, and peers — protects both your reproductive-health planning and your mental health.
The consistent message from women who have done it: your reproductive life is yours to define. With the right information and the right team, the possibilities are wider than many people first assume.
Evidence & Sources
Synthesized from PVA Consortium consumer guides and Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation patient-education booklets (retrieved 2026-06-24). See RESEARCH-SOURCES.md for complete provenance.
Primary clinical detail on menstruation, fertility, gynecological screening, contraception, pregnancy, labor and delivery, the autonomic-dysreflexia-in-childbirth risk, and menopause is drawn from the PVA Sexuality and Reproductive Health in Adults with Spinal Cord Injury consumer guide and the Reeve Sexuality & Reproductive Health After Paralysis booklet. The women-specific mental-health section is drawn from the Reeve Women’s Mental Health After Paralysis booklet. Where a desirable detail (such as the role of regional anesthesia in managing AD during labor) extends beyond what these consumer sources state, it is flagged as general guidance to confirm with your own care team. This guide does not re-teach autonomic-dysreflexia first aid or the general picture of sexual function — see the autonomic-dysreflexia and sexuality-after-sci guides.
Printable One-Pager Notes
- Keep the 🚨 Red Flags block in the upper half — AD in pregnancy/labor is the emergency to recognize; it can mimic or coexist with preeclampsia.
- Core reassurances: fertility is typically preserved; most women carry to term and deliver healthy babies.
- Core cautions: routine gyn/breast screening matters more because pain may not warn you; estrogen contraception adds to an already-raised clot risk; T6+ means AD risk through exams, pregnancy, and especially labor.
- Plan ahead: OB experienced with SCI, written birth plan with AD triggers and response, pain/AD management discussed before labor.
- Keep “talk to your team early” and peer-connection language scannable.
- The markdown itself is the source of truth for print content.