Five days of inpatient scoliosis-specific exercises improve preoperative spinal flexibility and facilitate curve correction of patients with rigid idiopathic scoliosis

Preoperative spine flexibility plays a key role in the intraoperative treatment course of severe scoliosis. In this cohort study, we examined the effects of 5 day inpatient scoliosis-specific exercise (SSE) on the spinal flexibility of patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis before surgery. A...

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Veröffentlicht in:Spine deformity 2025-01, Vol.13 (1), p.165-175
Hauptverfasser: Fan, Yunli, To, Michael K. T., Kuang, Guan-Ming, Lou, Nan, Zhu, Feng, Tao, Huiren, Li, Guangshuo, Yeung, Eric H. K., Cheung, Kenneth M. C., Cheung, Jason P. Y.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Preoperative spine flexibility plays a key role in the intraoperative treatment course of severe scoliosis. In this cohort study, we examined the effects of 5 day inpatient scoliosis-specific exercise (SSE) on the spinal flexibility of patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis before surgery. A total of 65 patients were analyzed. These patients were divided into a prospective cohort ( n  = 43, age: 15 ± 1.6 years, 36 girls and 7 boys, Lenke class 1 and 2, Cobb angle: 64 ± 11°) who underwent spinal fusion in 2020, and a retrospective cohort ( n  = 22, age: 15 ± 1.5 years, 17 girls and 5 boys, Lenke class 1 or 2, Cobb angle: 63 ± 10°), who underwent surgery between 2018 and 2019 and did not receive preoperative SSE. Rigid scoliosis was defined as a reduction of less than 50% in Cobb angle between the preoperative fulcrum bending and initial standing curve magnitude. In the prospective cohort, 21 patients (Cobb angle: 65 ± 11°) presented with rigid thoracic scoliosis (pre-SSE fulcrum bending: 40 ± 9°, 39% reduction), and therefore received 5-day SSE to improve their preoperative spinal flexibility (SSE group), whereas 22 patients (Cobb angle: 63 ± 12°) presented with flexible thoracic scoliosis (pre-SSE fulcrum bending: 27 ± 8°, 58% reduction), and therefore underwent surgery without preoperative SSE (non-SSE group). For patients who received 5-day preoperative SSE for 4 h every day, the International Schroth Three-Dimensional Scoliosis Therapy technique was implemented with an inpatient model. After 5 days of SSE, improvements in Cobb angle with post-SSE fulcrum-bending radiography (23 ± 7°, 66% reduction) and pulmonary function (forced expiratory volume in 1 s/forced expiratory volume: 87% before SSE and 92% after SSE, p  
ISSN:2212-134X
2212-1358
2212-1358
DOI:10.1007/s43390-024-00965-1