Health Information
Scoliosis
Surgery
Surgery may be used to treat severe scoliosis. The goal of surgery is to improve a severe spinal curve. The result will not be a perfectly straight spine, but the goal is to balance the spine and to make sure the curve does not get worse. Surgery usually involves stabilizing the spine and keeping the curve from getting worse by permanently joining the vertebrae together.
Things that are considered before surgery include:
- The person's age.
- The size, direction, and location of the Reference spinal curve(s).
- Whether other treatment (such as bracing) has failed.
Surgery may be considered if:
- A child has a moderate spinal curve.
- The curve is expected to get worse. In children, a curve may progress because a child has not finished growing. In adults, a large curve may continue to get worse.Reference 1
- Bracing cannot be used or does not work.
Surgery choices
The main type of surgery for scoliosis involves attaching rods to the spine and doing a Reference spinal fusion. Spinal fusion is used to stabilize and reduce the size of the curve and stop the curve from getting worse by permanently joining the vertebrae into a solid mass of bone.
Other techniques are sometimes used, including Reference instrumentation without fusion, which attaches devices such as metal rods to the spine to stabilize a spinal curve without fusing the spine together. This is only done in very young children when a fusion, which stops the growth of the fused part of the spine, is not desirable. The child usually has to wear a brace full-time after having this surgery.
What to think about
The timing of surgery for scoliosis in children is controversial. Spinal fusion stops the growth of the fused part of the spine, so some experts believe that surgery should be delayed until the child is at least 10 years old and preferably 12. But even after surgery the rest of the spine will continue to grow normally in children who are still growing.
Surgical treatment in children and teens usually requires several days in the hospital and limitations on activity for approximately a year. In adults, the average hospital stay is longer.
Adults who have surgery for scoliosis that results from changes in the spine due to aging (degenerative scoliosis) are more likely than children to have significant complications. Even though surgery usually reduces their pain, other complications may occur, such as Reference pseudoarthrosis Opens New Window and wound infections.
| By: | Reference Healthwise Staff | Last Revised: Reference November 19, 2012 |
| Medical Review: | Reference John Pope, MD - Pediatrics
Reference Robert B. Keller, MD - Orthopedics |
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