Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) is the most common paediatric spinal deformity, affecting about 3% of school-aged children worldwide. This disorder occurs in otherwise healthy children who bear no obvious deficiencies in the components of the spinal column itself. The cause of AIS is poorly understood, as is implied by the name. Lesions of the bony composition of the vertebrae, the vertebral endplates, the paraspinous muscles, or the neurological system each have been proposed to explain disease pathogenesis. Progress has been hampered by the absence of an obvious AIS animal model. Consequently we have used genetic studies in human populations to identify factors underlying AIS susceptibility. The complex inheritance and population frequency of AIS suggest that many genetic factors are involved in this disease. To search comprehensively for such factors we previously undertook the first genome-wide association study (GWAS) of AIS susceptibility in a cohort of 419 families in Texas, USA. We found that chromosome 3 SNPs in the proximity of the We tested more than 327 000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across all human autosomes for association with disease.Introduction
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