Tuyển tập báo cáo các nghiên cứu khoa học quốc tế ngành hóa học dành cho các bạn yêu hóa học tham khảo đề tài: Autonomic dysreflexia in a tetraplegic patient due to blocked urethral catheter: Spinal cord injury patients with lesions above T-6 require prompt treatment of obstructed urinary catheter to prevent life-threatening complications of autonomic dysreflexia | International Journal of Emergency Medicine SpringerOpen0 This Provisional PDF corresponds to the article as it appeared upon acceptance. Fully formatted PDF and full text HTML versions will be made available soon. Autonomic dysreflexia in a tetraplegic patient due to blocked urethral catheter Spinal cord injury patients with lesions above T-6 require prompt treatment of obstructed urinary catheter to prevent life-threatening complications of autonomic dysreflexia International Journal of Emergency Medicine 2012 5 6 doi 1865-1380-5-6 Subramanian Vaidyanathan Bakul Soni Tun Oo tunoo@ Peter Hughes peterhughes1@ Gurpreet Singh Kamesh Putya ISSN 1865-1380 Article type Case report Submission date 16 November 2011 Acceptance date 1 February 2012 Publication date 1 February 2012 Article URL http content 5 1 6 This peer-reviewed article was published immediately upon acceptance. It can be downloaded printed and distributed freely for any purposes see copyright notice below . Articles in International Journal of Emergency Medicine are listed in PubMed and archived at PubMed Central. For information about publishing your research in International Journal of Emergency Medicine go to http authors instructions For information about other SpringerOpen publications go to http 2012 Vaidyanathan et al. licensee Springer. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http licenses by which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original work is properly cited. 1 Autonomic dysreflexia in a tetraplegic patient due to a blocked urethral catheter Spinal cord injury patients with lesions above T-6 require prompt treatment of an obstructed urinary catheter to prevent life-threatening complications of