2018
DOI: 10.1155/2018/4017858
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Ageing, Disability, and Spinal Cord Injury: Some Issues of Analysis

Abstract: Spinal cord injury is a disabling disorder, worldwide spread, with important consequences on functioning and health conditions and impacts on physical, psychological, and social well-being. The consequences are related to the lesion itself and to other complications related to the lesion. In the last decades, there have been an increasing of the mean ages of onset and also an increase in life expectancy after the lesion. So, differently from the past, people with spinal cord injury can age after the lesion. Ta… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, obesity), and other chronic diseases of aging. [3,4] These are often atypical and develop prematurely (20-25 years earlier) in comparison to the able-bodied population as a consequence of accelerated functional and metabolic decline after SCI [5,6], Fig. 1.…”
Section: Cardiometabolic Risk Following the Spinal Cord Injurymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, obesity), and other chronic diseases of aging. [3,4] These are often atypical and develop prematurely (20-25 years earlier) in comparison to the able-bodied population as a consequence of accelerated functional and metabolic decline after SCI [5,6], Fig. 1.…”
Section: Cardiometabolic Risk Following the Spinal Cord Injurymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Typically, spinal cord injury affects mostly men (80% in comparison to women, 20%) [6], with young men aged between 15 and 30 [4] or 20-35 [1] most affected. However, research evidence suggests that the average age at injury is increasing [5][6][7].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Italy is one the oldest countries in Europe and in the world and now it is also one of the first countries that are fighting against COVID-19. In our country, the increasing life expectancy (80.5 for males and 84.9 for females, with a total life expectancy of 82.9) [1] has led to very positive consequences for health and the well-being of elderly people: a very high number of older adults live and act independently in their daily life, even if they have one or more than one chronic disease [2][3][4]. These women and men represent a very important reference for their social, economic and cultural roles in the society.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%