Of 42 patients with resolvingscoliosis, 34 were followed up for more than 25 infantile idiopathicyears. Twenty had been primarily treated in a plaster bed and 14 by physiotherapy. The mean angle of the curve at presentation was 17° and at follow-up it was 5°. No patient had significant progression of the scoliosis during the growth spurt. When adults few had back pain or an increased disability score and there was no interference with work or social activities. The rib-vertebra angle difference proved to be an essential radiological sign when distinguishing resolving from progressive infantile
Aims. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of maturity status at the time of surgery on final spinal height in patients with an adolescent
The aim of this study was to determine whether there is an increased prevalence of scoliosis in patients who have suffered from a haematopoietic malignancy in childhood. Patients with a history of lymphoma or leukaemia with a current age between 12 and 25 years were identified from the regional paediatric oncology database. The medical records and radiological findings were reviewed, and any spinal deformity identified. The treatment of the malignancy and the spinal deformity, if any, was noted.Aims
Methods
Low bone mass and osteopenia have been described in the axial and peripheral skeleton of patients with adolescent
A series of 98 patients with juvenile
A review was performed of 86 cases of infantile
Stature and its components were examined in 143 girls aged 11 to 15 years with adolescent
Analysis was made of the results of two methods of treatment of progressive infantile
A study of 130 scoliotic children with curves measuring 10 degrees or more has been performed in order to elucidate the importance of stature, growth and development. Girls with adolescent idiopathic curves measuring 15 degrees or more were taller than girls with smaller idiopathic curves and taller than those whose scoliosis was secondary to leg-length inequality (pelvic tilt scoliosis). No differences were observed as regards growth velocity or development. The increased standing height may be genetic but the uncoiling effect of the normal kyphosis to give a flat lateral profile is a more likely cause. The familial trend in
Twenty-seven children with progressive infantile
The incidence of congenital dislocation of the hip in 156 children with infantile
One hundred and sixty-seven patients with adolescent
Twenty-eight patients with adolescent
We reviewed 77 unfused and 91 fused patients with
We have investigated the effect of multisegmental spinal fusion on the long-term functional and radiological outcome in patients with scoliosis. We compared these patients both with those whose spine had not been fused, and with a control group. We studied 68 patients with
We present a method of visualising spinal deformities in three dimensions using conventional radiographs and computer graphics. The shape of the spinal column can be determined from the anteroposterior and lateral radiographs and displayed in any projection. In patients with adolescent
Routine examination for spinal deformity as part of a school health screening programme was introduced in Singapore in 1981. The three different ethnic groups included in the study provided figures for the prevalence of
We have developed a simple technique for demonstrating the sagittal profile of each rotated level of a scoliotic spine and used it to determine the patterns of lordosis and kyphosis in each of six clinical types of
Fifty-nine children with juvenile
This paper describes a simple method for the recording of rib deformity in