Abstract

Scoliosis is a condition in which there is a lateral curve to the spine. The cause of scoliosis is unknown, but different aetiologies have been suggested, but mostly cause has been idiopathic in nature. Muscle spasms, cerebral palsy, Marfan syndrome, and tumours (neurofibromatosis) are some of the suggested aetiologies. Progressive adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) affects mainly girls and anterior spinal overgrowth during the second growth spurt appear to be a significant cause. The diagnosis of scoliosis is primarily a clinical suspicion followed by an AP and lateral X ray of spine in standing position. Measurement of the Cobb angle is the standard method of assessing the curvature in a quantitative manner. It is the angle between two lines, drawn perpendicular to the upper endplate of the first vertebra involved and the lower endplate of the last vertebra involved. Cobb angles are followed for both curves for those with two curves. Risser classification grades the skeletal maturity on X rays and is considered along with the Cobb angle to making a decision towards surgery. Indications for surgical correction of scoliosis is not clearly defined however, the treatment of scoliosis is based on the severity and progressive nature of the curve. Cobb angle above 40 degrees, rapidly progressing curve, major thoracic deformity affecting the function such as breathing and cosmetic reasons, are some of the indications for surgery. There are several modalities of surgical correction. Main method has been correction of the deformity and fixation with one or two rods and pedicle screws followed by bone grafting. Harrington rods were the primarily used system, but with time many spinal instrumentation systems and rods have been introduced to the market. Apart from using rods some have tried anterior vertebral body stapling and anterior vertebral body tethering for correction scoliosis using the principle of growth modulation.
 We conducted a systematic review to answer the question, 'What is the role of growth modulation in the management of idiopathic scoliosis?' All articles / publications published from 2010 May to 2019 October were used as research data. A health, related database (PubMed) was used for the search. Search criteria revealed 99 articles initially and 37 articles after filtered based on title reading. Then 18 articles were selected for the final analysis after being filtered manually by reading summary and abstracts of each article.

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