| I had and have that curve. I got PT and chiropractic from 11-14 and they had no apparent impact. I am now over 50. No problems related to it. I do notice it in yoga—some things are easier on one side than the other. |
| My experience is with my DD who had a 12% curve. The pediatric orthopedist we saw recommended the same - we saw the dr every 6 months for about a year and a half, until DD had finished with pubertal growth. |
| I have scoliosis and wore a Boston brace as a teen---my curvature is in the 25-30 degree range. There probably isn't much you can do to correct curvature that's already present, but I agree with everyone above who suggests that he focuses on core strength. I had a lot of issues with back pain as an adult that I believe was a result of my scoliosis and the after-effects of years of bracing. I started doing barre and pilates regularly about a decade ago, and that pain has completely resolved since. |
I don't recall. DH saw Eric. Here is website https://schrothdc.com/about |
That's interesting, I thought 18% was the magic number that they recommend a brace. |
Bracing corrects it as they grow (I mean OP's kid might have too small a curve to bother, IDK) but the braces definitely are evidence based. |
Certain types of braces can also correct existing curvature while the teen continues to grow. The "old time" braces only prevented worsening. Seems more of those old-time braces have evolved into more modern corrective devices. Some, however, are designed for night-time only (laying down positions). The Rigo-Cheneau (which my son used) is used day and night and also uses CAD imaging instead of body casts to design the custom fit. Our son began with 28 degree curvature. Corrected in brace, he was 6 percent (and out of brace 16 or less). He was told he could just wear it at night at that point; but unfortunately, we were unable to enforce his continued use for as long as he should have (he was a bit of a behaviorally challenged kid), so he ultimately grew several inches and the curvature increased to 24 degrees. He came to regret not wearing it for longer when he was joining ROTC and was afraid they would not accept him because of the degree of his curvature. I continue to emphasize proper posture and core exercises for him. |
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My son grew out of it too. (My son isn’t as tall
As yours.) My son did the schroth method, but I don’t know if it really helped. My husband made him do it, but the Dr was like “he doesn’t need to do it, but it won’t hurt.) |
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I would certainly continue to monitor. I am a 50 YO male that was diagnosed when I was a teen and had to wear a brace - I only wore at night.
I had regular appointments and didn't need to wear the brace beyond HS. I forget what the curve numbers were but it was significant enough that the doc says that I lost about 1.5 inches in height. I plan to check out the Schroth information because i do have back pain and there are noticable differences in my core muscle side to side. |
| Surgery was recommended for my nephew, but things improved. I don't know a lot of the details because I didn't want to overstep. |