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  • I'm doctor Noojan Kazemi and I'm a neurosurgeon at UAMS.

  • Scoliosis is a complex spine condition that we treat

  • here at UAMS. As spine surgeons we see

  • these patients from childhood onto

  • the adult stages of the condition. It really is,

  • it refers to a deformity on the spine.

  • One of the most common types of scoliosis

  • is adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. This

  • most frequently happens in females

  • in the teenage years and as they grow

  • the condition can either be arrested or

  • it can progress, and become severe. One of the most common presentations of

  • scoliosis is pain but

  • also it is deformity. It's it's the cosmetic aspect of their

  • deformity.

  • Treatment involves often monitoring and understanding

  • the degree of the deformity and observing it over time,

  • and deciding whether it is stable

  • or perhaps even improved, or it is

  • becoming progressive and needs surgical treatment If that is appropriate.

  • When we decide to operate on these patients

  • we take into account the degree of the deformity and the

  • correction that we can achieve.

  • So in that population

  • it is a particular type of treatment

  • that we administer to these patients depending on

  • the severity and the type of scoliosis they have.

  • Some of the patience that we see have neuromuscular conditions

  • and their scoliosis results as their inability

  • for their muscles to correct their spine and so

  • their deformities are often very severe; and we correct that through surgery.

  • I also see scoliosis or imbalance

  • of the spine in the adult population

  • and that can be either from patients who had scoliosis

  • as teenagers or adolescence who did not have treatment for it, but

  • progressed slowly into the adult years. And overtime

  • our spine undergoes degeneration in all of us.

  • Our muscles become weaker, often we gain weight,

  • and that puts undue pressure on the spine.

  • We tend to lose height as we age as well and that is as a result of these

  • conditions. And this can

  • not only worsen the deformity of scoliosis, but it can also

  • result in nerve compression which leads to pain.

  • So I treat patients such as adults who have this deformity

  • and their deformity you can imagine as a little bit more fixed.

  • And so we need other ways of treating

  • their spinal and balance to bring it back into balance and to alleviate their

  • pain.

  • So there's a range of different causes behind scoliosis in different age groups

  • and as spine surgeons I think our role

  • is in being knowledgeable and judicious in understanding which patient

  • deserves which kind of treatment, so

  • targeting our treatment. And then once we have a treatment plan,

  • executing it to the best of our ability, with all the resources that we have here

  • at a large academic tertiary referral center.

I'm doctor Noojan Kazemi and I'm a neurosurgeon at UAMS.

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