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Scoliosis Patients Can Benefit From Simple Torso-Rotating Exercise


Category: Research News
Tuesday, January 06, 2009 at 9:27:19 AM
A New Zealand researcher has suggested that patients suffering from scoliosis (crooked spines shaped as an S or a C) can significantly improve their condition with simple torso-rotating exercises.

David Woodbridge, an Auckland physiotherapist, says that repeating the simple back-strengthening exercises can make a major difference to the lives of those suffering from the inherited condition.

It is believed that if a mother has scoliosis as a teenager, her daughters have a one in four chance of developing it as a teen, reports the NZPA.

In scoliosis, the spine is curves by more than 10 degrees. While sometimes the curving stops naturally, but at times it continues to progress and the curve reaches about 30 degrees.

Currently, the patients are fitted with a brace, which may stop the curve getting worse.

If the curve reaches 40 to 45-degree range patients often have to undergo an operation to have steel rods inserted along their spine.

Woodbridge insists that a simple torso-rotating exercise treatment stops the curve getting worse, and can correct patients' spines before they reach that 40-degree range.

During the study, 95 per cent of their patients with curves under 40 degrees stopped getting worse, and in many cases improved.

One spine straightened out an amazing 43 degrees to almost perfect.

Woodbridge said that the exercise could also help alleviate the pain of the condition in older people, but might not be able to improve it permanently.

Source-ANI
TAN/M
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