EDUCATIONAL TOOL ONLY. Not legal or medical advice. Not affiliated with the VA.
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Spinal Cord Injury Residuals
✓ VERIFIED AGAINST 38 C.F.R.§ 4.124a (Neurological conditions and convulsive disorders) · reviewed 2026-05-15 · ClaimRecon Editorial Team
Spinal Cord Injury Residuals is rated by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs under DC 8024 of 38 CFR § 4.124a, DC 8024 across 1 severity tier (0%). Service connection requires (1) a current diagnosis, (2) an in-service event, injury, or exposure, and (3) a medical nexus opinion linking the two under 38 C.F.R. § 3.303.
OVERVIEW
Neurological deficits following spinal cord damage including paralysis, sensory loss, and autonomic dysfunction.
RATING CRITERIA (1 LEVELS)
0%
Spinal cord injury (SCI) does not have a dedicated diagnostic code in 38 CFR. Rating is built from: (1) the underlying spine condition under § 4.71a (General Rating Formula for Diseases and Injuries of the Spine — cervical/thoracic/lumbar), (2) separately rating each neurological residual under its applicable DC (motor weakness via § 4.124a 8500-8730 peripheral-nerve series by territory; bowel/bladder under § 4.115a/b; spasticity under DC 8024 by analogy; sexual dysfunction under DC 7522 + SMC(k); decubitus ulcers under § 4.118; autonomic dysreflexia from T6-or-above lesions), and (3) combining all under § 4.25. Where intramedullary findings (syrinx, post-traumatic syringomyelia) are documented, DC 8024 (syringomyelia) applies directly with minimum 30%.
KEY EVIDENCE TO GATHER
-Service treatment records showing injury or complaints
-Imaging (X-ray, MRI, CT)
-Range of motion measurements
-Flare-up documentation per Sharp v. Shulkin
-Buddy statements describing limitations
-Prescription history
-Physical therapy records
-Employment impact documentation
C&P EXAM TIPS (6)
1.Do NOT stretch, warm up, or take pain medication before your exam. The VA needs your baseline limitation.
2.Report your WORST day. DeLuca v. Brown requires documentation of functional loss during flare-ups.
3.Tell the examiner about flare-ups: frequency, duration, estimated ROM loss. Sharp v. Shulkin (2017) requires estimates.
4.Request active, passive, weight-bearing, and non-weight-bearing ROM testing per Correia v. McDonald (2016).
5.If you use assistive devices (brace, cane), bring them.
6.Describe daily activity impact: work, sleep, household tasks.
SOURCES & EDITORIAL
Rating criteria text quoted verbatim from 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a (Neurological conditions and convulsive disorders). Source verified 2026-05-15 by ClaimRecon Editorial Team during a regulation-text comparison against the Cornell Law CFR mirror; eCFR.gov is the authoritative government source.
EDUCATIONAL TOOL ONLY. NOT LEGAL OR MEDICAL ADVICE.
NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS.
CLAIM RECON 2026