Study: Surgical Treatment Can Decrease Back Pain for Young Scoliosis Patients

Back pain affects approximately 75 percent of adolescents with idiopathic scoliosis, and the pain can be reduced after posterior fusion, according to an article published in Spine.

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The factors that can increase preoperative pain include obesity, maturity and large proximal thoracic curve magnitude. Additionally, patients who think of themselves as “deformed” often experience more preoperative pain and less postoperative pain reduction.

Researchers reviewed 1,433 patients who underwent surgery for idiopathic scoliosis, 77.9 percent of which reported preoperative pain. In most cases, the pain was reduced at one or two years after the operation. Preoperative analgesic was used in 28.8 percent of patients preoperatively and in 29.5 percent of patients two years after surgery.

Read the abstract about back pain for patients with scoliosis.

Read Articles Related to Scoliosis:
6 Points on Surgical Intervention for Scoliosis

Adolescent Scoliosis Treatment Challenges and Innovations: Q&A With Dr. Christopher R. Good of the Virginia Spine Institute

Spinal Fusion for Scoliosis Correction Has Good Outcomes After 10 Years

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