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Spinal Cord Injury Slows You Down
But Doesn’t Stop You

Whether you’re newly injured or still recovering after months or years, there’s always room to improve strength, function, and independence.

 

At Miran, we work with people living with incomplete spinal cord injuries to help them move forward physically and emotionally.

Recovery After Spinal Cord Injury Looks Different for Everyone

Some people lose sensation. Some lose movement. Others struggle with bladder control, balance, posture, or fatigue. An incomplete spinal cord injury doesn’t follow one rule and recovery won’t either.

 

That’s why your therapy must be designed around your current ability, your goals, and what your nervous system can still reconnect.

We Help You Focus on What’s Still Possible and Build From There

Goals we work toward:

 

  • Regaining strength and motor control below the injury

  • Improving sitting balance, posture, and trunk support

  • Developing safe transfers and standing (if possible)

  • Enhancing hand function and fine motor tasks

  • Building cardiovascular fitness without joint stress

  • Managing spasticity, stiffness, and tone

 

Whether you’re walking with assistance or working from a wheelchair, we start where you are.

Therapy That’s Personalised, Persistent, and Honest

At Miran, we don’t make promises we make plans. Every spinal cord rehab program starts with a detailed assessment by a physiotherapist trained in neuro recovery. We combine the tools that work best for your goals:

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  • Physiotherapy for strength, posture, trunk control, and gait training

  • Aquatherapy for supported movement in water, reducing fear and effort

  • Robotics for retraining step patterns and arm/hand function

  • Tracking tools to monitor strength, tone, and progress

  • Functional training: transfers, wheelchair posture, core control

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Every session is paced for you, not for a protocol.

Spinal Cord Rehab Comes With Questions
Here Are the Most Important Ones

1. Can someone with an incomplete spinal cord injury walk again?

Sometimes, it depends on the injury level and rehab consistency. We focus on improving whatever function is possible: sitting, standing, transfers, or walking.​

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2. What does an incomplete injury mean?

It means the spinal cord isn’t fully damaged  some messages between brain and body may still pass through. This gives more potential for recovery with therapy.​

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3. Is rehab still helpful even years after injury?

Yes. With consistent physiotherapy, people often improve posture, strength, and even regain small functions even long after the initial injury.

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4. Can aquatherapy help with spinal cord injury?

Absolutely. The water supports the body, allows safer movement, and reduces fear of falling making it ideal for trunk and balance work.

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5. How often should therapy be done?

That depends on the severity and goals. We usually recommend 2 to 4 sessions a week at the beginning, which may change as strength builds.

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6. What if my upper body is fine but my legs aren’t?

That’s common. We’ll use your upper body to assist in trunk control, transfers, and eventually support lower limb retraining using robotics, aquatherapy, or land-based therapy.

You May Not Know What’s Possible Yet
But We Can Help You Find Out.

Spinal cord injury recovery can feel slow, uncertain, and emotionally draining. But that doesn’t mean it’s over. Whether your goals are to sit more upright, stand with help, or eventually take a few steps we’ll build a plan that meets you there, and moves with you.

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