To sever the spinal cord causes paralysis of the body below (farther from the head) the point at which the cord is severed.
bad news
Yes. Even though the spinal cord is severed, all the reflexes still work both above and below the severed spinal cord.
severed spinal cord
paraplegia
The brain stem connects the brain to the spinal cord, so that the brain can send messages through the cord to the rest of the body. The functioning of the body is severely compromised if the spinal cord connections are severed.
When your spinal cord is damaged you may not be able to walk
Usually when your spinal cord brakes it usually is severed arteries and will collapse your whole body. You would be dead in seconds
why is atropine used on an adult with severe head trauma and severed spinal cord?
The use of the body below the level of the break.
Reflexes don't go up the spinal cord to the brain, as the body wants to remove itself from the stimulus as quickly as possible. So, it goes in a loop, called a reflex arc, where the sensory neurons detect the tap and the stimulus is so strong it immediately jumps to the motor neurons to make the leg jerk. It all happens in the spinal cord. However, you don't feel it because the nerves going up (afferent) and down (efferent) the spinal cord to the brain have been severed and so the brain doesn't detect it.
An incomplete spinal cord injury happens when only part of the spinal cord is damaged. This will result in a variety of residual muscle control, sensation or both.
the neck will be paralyzed