In Canada, congenital scoliosis is managed by geneticss. Scoliosis is a three-dimensional deformity of the spine in which the vertebrae rotate and curve sideways more than 10 degrees, measured by the Cobb method on a standing radiograph. It is the most common spinal deformity in children, with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis affecting 2-3% of children aged 10-16; degenerative scoliosis is far more prevalent in older adults, present in roughly 30-60% of people over 60 on imaging surveys.
Scoliosis (ICD-10: M41) is a structural lateral curvature of the spine of 10 degrees or more on a standing posteroanterior radiograph, measured by the Cobb method, almost always accompanied by vertebral rotation that produces a rib hump or lumbar prominence on forward bending. It is classified by age of onset (infantile under age 3, juvenile 3-9, adolescent 10-17, and adult after skeletal maturity) and by cause: idiopathic (about 80% of pediatric cases, no identifiable cause), congenital (vertebral malformation present at birth), neuromuscular (cerebral palsy, muscular dystrophy, spinal muscular atrophy, spinal cord injury), syndromic (Marfan syndrome, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, neurofibromatosis), and degenerative or de novo scoliosis arising in adulthood from asymmetric disc and facet wear. The Lenke classification subdivides surgical AIS curves into six types based on apical location, structural compensatory curves, lumbar modifier, and sagittal alignment. Severity is graded by Cobb angle: 10-25 degrees mild, 25-45 moderate, above 45 severe.
The key symptoms of Congenital scoliosis are: Visible asymmetry of the back when bending forward — one side of the rib cage or lumbar paraspinal muscles is more prominent than the other (the rib hump seen on the Adams forward-bend test)., Uneven shoulders, with one shoulder blade appearing higher or more prominent than the other, often first noticed by a parent, school nurse, or swim coach., Asymmetric waist creases or a tilted pelvis, with clothing hanging unevenly and one hip looking higher than the other., Head not centered over the pelvis when viewed from behind, producing a leaning posture that worsens as the curve grows., Back pain, particularly in adult degenerative scoliosis — present in 60-80% of adults with de novo curves, located in the lumbar region and aggravated by standing or walking., Leg pain, numbness, or weakness from foraminal narrowing in degenerative scoliosis — radicular symptoms can dominate over axial back pain., Neurogenic claudication in adult lumbar scoliosis — pain and heaviness in the legs after walking a defined distance, relieved by sitting or leaning forward..
Diagnosis of scoliosis combines a structured examination with a single standing posteroanterior radiograph. The Adams forward-bend test is the standard initial screen: the patient bends forward at the waist with arms hanging, and the clinician inspects the back from behind for a unilateral rib or lumbar prominence. A scoliometer placed across the deformity at its apex quantifies trunk rotation; a reading of 7 degrees or more is the conventional threshold for referral for imaging. A full-length standing posteroanterior spine radiograph is the diagnostic gold standard. The Cobb angle is measured by drawing lines along the superior endplate of the most cranially tilted vertebra and the inferior endplate of the most caudally tilted vertebra, then measuring the angle between perpendiculars to these lines; 10 degrees or more confirms scoliosis. Skeletal maturity is assessed simultaneously using the Risser grade of iliac apophyseal ossification (0-5) and the triradiate cartilage; these drive progression risk and treatment thresholds. MRI of the entire neural axis is added in atypical presentations — onset before age 10, left thoracic curves, rapid progression, painful scoliosis, abnormal neurological examination, or congenital and syndromic forms — to look for syrinx, Chiari malformation, tethered cord, or intraspinal tumor, found in 15-25% of such cases. Pulmonary function testing is added in severe thoracic curves and in neuromuscular scoliosis. In adult de novo scoliosis, full-length standing radiographs and a lumbar MRI are standard to characterize curve magnitude, sagittal balance, and any neurogenic component. Routine school screening with the forward-bend test remains controversial: the USPSTF in 2018 concluded that the evidence for and against screening adolescents 10-18 for idiopathic scoliosis is currently insufficient (I statement), while the Scoliosis Research Society, AAOS, and AAP continue to recommend screening at school health visits.
Most scoliosis curves are mild and do not affect health or function across a lifetime. Curves that reach skeletal maturity below 30 degrees rarely progress in adulthood and have a near-normal pregnancy, work, and sports profile. Curves between 30 and 50 degrees at skeletal maturity progress by an average of 1 degree per year into adulthood, more rapidly in thoracic curves and in females, and may need surgical assessment in the 40s-60s. Curves above 50 degrees at maturity tend to progress steadily and often require surgical correction at some point. Bracing in skeletally immature patients with curves 25-45 degrees prevents progression to the 50-degree surgical threshold in 72% of patients (BrAIST trial). Posterior spinal fusion delivers 50-70% curve correction with patient-reported satisfaction of 90-95% at 2-5 years in AIS series. In adult degenerative scoliosis, pain and function rather than curve size determine prognosis — most patients respond to structured conservative care; long-segment surgical reconstruction improves quality-of-life scores in 70-80% but carries higher complication and revision rates than pediatric fusion.
Refer to a pediatric or adult spine orthopedic surgeon when a scoliometer reading is 7 degrees or more, a radiograph shows a Cobb angle of 20 degrees or more, the curve has progressed by 5 degrees between visits, the child is skeletally immature with a curve over 25 degrees, the patient has a syndromic or neuromuscular underlying diagnosis, the curve is atypical (left thoracic, painful, neurologic findings), or symptoms in adult scoliosis are unresponsive to 3 months of structured conservative care.
Find specialists →Bracing is a multi-year commitment from diagnosis until skeletal maturity (Risser 4-5), typically 2-4 years for an adolescent diagnosed at age 11-13. After posterior spinal fusion for AIS, most patients are walking with assistance within 1-2 days, discharged home in 3-5 days, return to school in 4-6 weeks, resume non-contact sport at 3-6 months, and contact or collision sports at 9-12 months. Fusion mass consolidation continues for 6-12 months. Adult deformity surgery recovery is slower: most patients walk with aids within a week, return to non-physical work at 6-12 weeks, and reach their plateau of functional improvement by 12-18 months.
Children with scoliosis should continue full participation in sports, dance, and physical education — exercise restriction has no evidence base and worsens self-image during a vulnerable period. Scoliosis-specific corrective exercises (Schroth, SEAS) are added as a daily home practice with weekly clinic check-ins during the active growth phase. Adults with degenerative scoliosis should aim for 150 minutes per week of moderate aerobic activity (walking, cycling, swimming) plus two sessions of resistance training focused on core, hip, and posterior chain. Aquatic exercise is particularly useful when standing tolerance is limited. Avoid heavy axial loading (deadlifts to maximum weight, military press) without supervised coaching in symptomatic adult scoliosis.
Look for a fellowship-trained pediatric spine surgeon for children and a fellowship-trained adult spinal deformity surgeon for adults; the two practices have meaningfully different techniques and complication profiles. High-volume centers and surgeons with annual deformity case loads over 50 show lower complication and revision rates in published registries. Confirm access to intraoperative neuromonitoring, dedicated pediatric anesthesia, and a multidisciplinary team including physiotherapists trained in Schroth or SEAS for non-operative care. For adult deformity, ask whether the surgeon routinely measures sagittal vertical axis, pelvic incidence, and lumbar lordosis as part of preoperative planning.
Medically reviewed by AIHealz Medical Editorial Board · May 12, 2026
Ranked by patient outcomes and specialized experience.
Verifying top specialists in Canada.
Apply as specialist →Specialists who treat Congenital scoliosis. Get expert guidance and personalized care.