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4-Part Series
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📋 In This Article
Everything in the first three articles of this series leads here — the practical, daily work of keeping your skin intact. Prevention is a collection of consistent, repeatable habits that replace the automatic protection your nervous system no longer provides. These habits, applied consistently, are the difference between skin that stays intact and skin that breaks down.
After spinal cord injury, you become the primary caregiver for your own skin. Your nervous system can no longer send automatic signals — the itch, the discomfort, the urge to reposition — that once protected your skin without conscious effort. That protection now comes from you.
This is not a burden to resent. It is a skill to build. The people who manage their skin successfully after SCI are not the ones who found it easy — they are the ones who made these habits non-negotiable and acted quickly when they noticed something wrong.
Prevention Works — And It Starts With You
Pressure injuries and the majority of common skin problems after SCI are largely preventable — not partly. The practices in this article, applied consistently, are the difference between skin that stays intact and skin that breaks down.
Alarms & Reminders
Every 10–15 min
Recurring alarms for pressure releases. Smartphone apps, smartwatch vibration, or environmental cues.
Handwashing
Before & after hygiene tasks
20 seconds with warm water and soap. Before and after catheterization, dressing changes, and all personal care.
Hydration
Throughout the day
6–8 glasses of water daily. Limit alcohol, sugar, and salt in drinks.
Hygiene & Bathing
Daily
Warm water, mild soap, top-down technique. Rinse thoroughly. Pat dry. Inspect during bathing.
Moisturize
Daily after bathing
Apply emollient moisturizer while skin is still slightly damp. Unscented preferred.
Skin Inspection
Minimum twice daily
After waking and at end of day. Mirror or phone camera. Color change, texture, swelling, open areas.
Pressure Releases
Every 10–15 min seated
Push-up, forward lean, side lean, or power chair tilt. 60 seconds minimum. Every 2 hours in bed.
Nutrition
Every meal
Protein, zinc, vitamin C, vitamin A, iron, and adequate calories. Consult a dietician for your plan.
Movement & Exercise
Daily
Range of motion exercises for all body parts above and below the injury level.
Positioning
Every transfer
Check body alignment every time you sit or lie. No wrinkles under contact surfaces.
Lift, Never Drag
Every transfer
Eliminate shearing by lifting the body clear of surfaces. Use transfer boards to assist.
Stop Smoking
Permanently
Nicotine displaces oxygen in blood, constricts peripheral vessels, and severely impairs wound healing.
The most important single habit in SCI skin care is performing regular pressure releases — and the most reliable way to maintain this is an external reminder system. Without consistent reminders, releases are easily forgotten during busy or engaging activities.
Smartphone alarms & apps
Set recurring alarms at 10–15 minute intervals during waking hours. Several dedicated SCI apps provide customizable pressure release reminders with tracking and compliance history.
Smartwatch vibration
A discreet vibration alert that does not interrupt conversations. Many wheelchair users find wrist-based reminders most effective, felt even when phone alarms are drowned out.
Environmental cues
TV commercial breaks, clock chimes, or transitions between tasks serve as natural release triggers. Best as supplements to — not replacements for — timed reminders.
Caregiver prompts
Establish a shared pressure release schedule with your caregiver. Include release timing in the written care plan for an additional accountability layer.
Hands are the primary vectors by which bacteria and viruses reach your body. Every surface you touch transfers microorganisms to your hands — and from there, to your face, catheter, skin care products, and every area you touch during personal care.
Wet hands with warm running water
Apply mild soap — bar or liquid
Lather thoroughly — between fingers, under fingernails, backs of hands
Scrub for at least 20 seconds — sing Happy Birthday twice to time it
Rinse completely under running water
Dry with a clean towel or air dry
Critical Handwashing Moments After SCI
Always wash before and after catheterization, wound dressing changes, and any personal hygiene procedure. When soap and water are unavailable, use alcohol-based hand sanitizer (minimum 60% alcohol) — though this does not replace thorough washing when hands are visibly soiled.
The dermis requires adequate hydration to maintain elasticity, suppleness, and barrier function. After SCI, collagen loss already reduces the skin’s natural resilience — dehydration makes the skin more brittle and prone to cracking.
Water Is the Best Hydration Source
Aim for 6–8 glasses (approximately 1.5–2 liters) daily, adjusted for your catheterization program and cardiac status. Alcohol dehydrates — it causes the body to lose more fluid than it takes in. Sugary and salty drinks alter the body’s ability to metabolize fluid effectively.
Daily bathing removes bacteria, dead skin cells, sweat, and contaminants. After SCI, it also stimulates circulation, assists skin cell turnover, and provides one of the most reliable daily inspection opportunities.
Top-Down Technique — Always
Face first, then body, genitals and gluteal fold last. Warm (not hot) water. Mild pH-balanced soap. Rinse completely — soap residue causes contact dermatitis. Pat dry, especially in skin folds. Extra attention between toes, groin, beneath the abdomen, and behind knees where moisture accumulates.
After bathing while skin is still slightly damp, apply an emollient moisturizer to the entire body. Choose unscented or lightly scented products. Avoid products with alcohol as the primary base — these evaporate quickly and leave skin drier than before.
After bathing while skin is still slightly damp, apply an emollient moisturizer to the entire body. Choose unscented or lightly scented products. Avoid products with alcohol as the primary base — these evaporate quickly and leave skin drier than before.
For callus management, soak the area in warm water for 10–15 minutes, then buff gently with a towel or soft washcloth. Never reduce a callus quickly or with a sharp object — the skin beneath softens and will split open easily. Consult a podiatrist for large or thick calluses on the foot.
Nicotine and the chemical compounds in cigarette smoke, e-cigarettes, cigars, pipes, and vaping products cause direct, measurable harm to the skin and to wound healing capacity.
How Smoking Damages Skin After SCI
Nicotine attaches to hemoglobin, displacing oxygen. Smoking constricts peripheral blood vessels — the exact system already compromised after SCI. Collagen production is reduced, immune response is suppressed, and capillary formation in healing tissue is diminished. For people with existing or healing pressure injuries, smoking can be the difference between a wound that heals and one that does not.
Talk with your healthcare provider about cessation support — nicotine replacement therapy, prescription medications (varenicline, bupropion), and behavioral counseling all significantly improve quit rates. If you have tried before and not succeeded, try again. The probability of successful cessation increases with each attempt.
The skin is built from what you eat. Adequate nutrition is essential not just for general health but specifically for skin integrity — and critically — for wound healing when skin does break down.
Protein
Builds and repairs all tissue including collagen. Needs increase significantly during wound healing.
Meat, poultry, fish, eggs, dairy, legumes
Zinc
Supports immune function and plays a direct role in wound healing and protein synthesis.
Shellfish, meat, legumes, nuts, seeds
Vitamin C
Essential for collagen synthesis. The body cannot make collagen without it.
Citrus, bell peppers, kiwi, strawberries
Vitamin A
Supports skin cell production and differentiation — the ongoing renewal of the epidermis.
Liver, eggs, dairy, orange/yellow vegetables
Iron
Required for oxygen transport in blood — delivering oxygen to skin cells and healing wounds.
Red meat, poultry, fish, legumes, fortified grains
Fluids
Adequate internal hydration maintains skin moisture, elasticity, and barrier function.
Water (primary), within catheterization limits
Too Thin
Reduces soft tissue between bone and skin. Even pressure-reducing surfaces may not adequately protect bony prominences. Sit bones, tailbone, and heels are particularly vulnerable.
Excess Weight
Excess fat compresses rather than disperses pressure. Skin folds in the groin, abdomen, and thighs create warm, moist environments prone to fungal and bacterial conditions.
The Protruding Abdomen Is Usually Not Fat
The abdominal protrusion many people with SCI develop is most often caused by weakened or paralyzed abdominal muscles — not by excess body fat. This is a structural change, not a weight issue, and should not prompt unnecessary caloric restriction.
Movement is medicine for the skin. Every time the body moves, blood circulates, pressure is released, skin cells are stimulated, and spasticity is managed. Range of motion (ROM) exercises should be performed daily for all body parts — including and especially those below the level of injury.
Don’t Leave Body Parts Out of Your Routine
If you cannot perform ROM exercises independently, a caregiver should assist. For people pursuing active exercise programs: notice which body parts are not engaged. A hand-cycle workout exercises the upper body but provides no movement to the lower extremities. Add targeted ROM or passive movement for any areas your primary exercise does not reach.
Skin inspection is the foundational practice that makes everything else possible. Without knowing the current state of your skin, you cannot detect problems early. Without early detection, every condition has more time to worsen before treatment begins.
Minimum Twice Daily — Without Exception
After a night in bed (before getting up) and at the end of the day after sitting. Use a long-handled mirror or smartphone camera for hard-to-see areas. Good lighting is essential — dim light conceals early pigment changes.
Color changes — redness, bluish/purplish discoloration, pallor, or new pigmentation
Texture changes — new scaling, thickening, dryness, or unusual smoothness
Swelling or edema — at or around bony prominences or in the extremities
Temperature differences — area warmer or cooler than surrounding skin
Open areas — blisters, tears, scratches, or abrasions, no matter how small
Moisture damage — skin appearing waterlogged, pale, or eroded from incontinence contact
Changing spots — any mark that is growing, changing color, or developing irregular borders
Unusual odor — particularly in skin folds or incontinence product areas
If You See Something — Act Immediately
Stay off the area. Do not wait to see if it gets better on its own. Contact your healthcare provider. Time matters enormously — an early-stage change treated promptly is a minor intervention. The same change left undetected for days becomes a wound that may take months to resolve.
Pressure reducing surfaces distribute body weight over the largest possible surface area, reducing peak pressure at bony prominences. Selection should be made with your physical therapist, occupational therapist, and physiatrist.
Medical grade foam
Contoured, dense foam that conforms to the body’s shape. Not craft foam or standard mattress foam — those compress completely and may increase pressure.
Gel
Viscous material that flows to conform to body contours, providing consistent pressure distribution. Often heavier than foam alternatives.
Air-filled (static or alternating pressure)
Static: constant air pressure conforming to body shape. Alternating: automatically shifts load between areas, providing built-in pressure relief.
Honeycombed or chambered designs
Allow air to flow between zones as the body moves, creating dynamic pressure distribution without active power requirements.
Mechanical or powered surfaces
Beds and cushions that automatically rotate, tilt, or alter their configuration on a programmed schedule. Assist but do not replace manual pressure releases.
Pressure Reducing — Not Pressure Eliminating
No device eliminates all pressure. Pressure releases must still be performed on schedule. Nothing should come between you and your pressure reducing surface except your clothing — pillows, folded blankets, and additional cushions compress and concentrate pressure.
Blue — excellent dispersal
Green — good
Yellow — acceptable
Orange — needs adjustment
Red — act now
Pressure releases are the single most important active intervention for preventing pressure injury in wheelchair users. They must be performed every 10 to 15 minutes for at least 60 seconds throughout the day while seated. In bed, full turns must occur at least every two hours.
Push-Up Release
Place hands on armrests or wheelchair frame and push the body fully up off the seat surface. Weight should be lifted completely clear of the cushion for at least 60 seconds.
Side Lean
Lean the body to one side (supporting on armrest if needed), lifting the opposite sitting bone completely off the surface. Alternate sides with each release.
Forward Lean
Lean the torso forward significantly over the knees, shifting weight off the sitting bones and tailbone. The lean must be substantial — a small forward incline does not adequately offload the sacrum.
Power Chair Tilt
The tilt feature reclines the entire seat backward, transferring weight from sitting bones to the back surface. A full tilt release should reach approximately 45 degrees or greater.
Nighttime Repositioning
During sleep, the body cannot reposition itself. Full repositioning must be scheduled externally every two hours — supine to left lateral to supine to right lateral. Each position requires pressure-reducing supports at bony contact points, adjusted with every turn. Alternating pressure mattresses assist but do not replace scheduled turning.
Positioning is the practice of arranging the body in its most anatomically natural posture whenever sitting or lying. Correct positioning distributes pressure, maintains joint health, supports breathing and digestion, and helps prevent secondary complications including scoliosis and hip subluxation.
Seated Positioning Principles
Hips at 90 degrees
Knees at 90 degrees
Feet fully supported on footrests
Trunk upright with back support
Head neutral — not flexed or extended
Armrests supporting arms without elevating shoulders
Lying Positioning Principles
Alternate supine and lateral every 2 hours
Heels completely offloaded — never resting on mattress
Knee-to-knee and ankle-to-ankle prominences padded
Positioning wedges to maintain lateral positions
Head and ears protected with appropriate surface
Dragging — Causes Shearing
Sliding the body across a surface creates lateral forces. The epidermis and dermis are forced in opposite directions and can separate — even a small shearing injury creates a bacterial entry point and can trigger autonomic dysreflexia.
Lifting — Eliminates Shearing
Raising the body completely clear of the surface before moving eliminates shearing forces entirely. Use transfer boards to assist when needed — but minimize sliding. Lift limbs clear rather than dragging clothing over skin.
Check for Wrinkles Before Every Transfer
Run a hand over the entire contact area to check for wrinkles in sheets, clothing, incontinence pads, or chair covers. Any fold creates a pressure ridge. Also check for objects in pockets, catheter tubing between body and seat, and clothing seams over bony prominences.
Skin health after SCI is a team effort. Your role is primary and daily — but these professionals are your partners at every stage of prevention, assessment, and treatment.
Physiatrist
Medical leader of your rehabilitation team, overseeing overall health management and directing care for your injury level and secondary conditions.
Wound Care Physician / Plastic Surgeon
Directs specialist wound treatment plans. Referral does not automatically mean surgery — the majority of pressure injuries are managed without surgical intervention.
Wound Care Nurse (WOC Nurse)
Assesses skin and equipment at every visit, performs dressing changes, monitors healing, and teaches you or your caregiver home wound care techniques.
Physical Therapist
Prescribes equipment, teaches safe movement techniques, performs pressure mapping, and in many settings takes an active role in wound treatment.
Occupational Therapist
Supports your ability to independently perform skin inspection routines, bathing adaptations, and transfer techniques.
Dietician
Assesses nutritional status through blood testing and food diaries. Develops a personalized plan that supports skin integrity and optimizes wound healing nutrients.
Insurance Nurse Case Manager
Helps navigate authorization and procurement of specialized equipment, wound care supplies, and therapy services. A valuable advocate for your resources.
Psychologist / Counselor
Helps you develop coping strategies, maintain motivation, and process the emotional dimensions of living with a body that requires this level of daily attention.
Vocational Counselor
Supports continued participation in meaningful work when skin care needs require changes to your work schedule or environment.
800-539-7309 · Monday–Friday · 9:00 am to 8:00 pm ET · Toll-free, confidential
https://npiap.com — Free staging guides, clinical tools, and materials
www.pva.org — Free download: Pressure Ulcer Prevention & Treatment Following SCI
📚 SCI Skin Care — 4-Part Series
Article 1
Understanding Your Skin After SCI
Article 2
Common Skin Conditions After SCI
Article 3
Pressure Injury: Staging & Treatment
Article 4
Daily Prevention & Skin Care Routines
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For more information, contact the Reeve Foundation Information Specialists at 800-539-7309, Monday–Friday, 9:00 am to 8:00 pm ET.
The National Paralysis Resource Center is supported by the Administration for Community Living (ACL), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). · Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation © 2026