Well, I haven’t been around much recently but we had our follow-up appointment with my daughters’ doctor.
Just a quick history – She was diagnosed 10 months ago at age 14 with a 38 degree curve. A local doctor said she needed to be braced and wanted to put her in a Boston Brace for 2 years. She was braced briefly in Jan/Feb with the SpineCor but did not achieve a significant inbrace correction.
One of the things that bothered me about my daughters’ situation was the assessment of her maturity by way of Risser; she was Risser 0 at diagnosis however almost 1 year post menarche and had already grown 6 inches taller than my wife. We live near a large metropolitan area with several SRS doctors. We sought a doctor who was not only an SRS physician (suggesting a focus on scoliosis) but also knowledge of skeletal maturity indicators. We were fortunate to find one 80 miles away, indeed this fellow writes many papers on skeletal maturity and, in my opinion, is the perfect doctor to assess my daughters somewhat unique circumstances. (As an aside, he used to practice at a Shriners hospital and used to offer the SpineCor. He is now participating in the Braist trial). We decided in the spring after consultation with this doctor (and incorporating the information about her skeletal maturity based on her hand xray) to “watch and wait”. Yesterday, we went to our appointment with great anxiety (even more so after reading Sharon’s post).
In any event, we went into the consultation room after she had her xray. The doctor soon followed along with a student (intern? Resident? I don’t know, it is a university/teaching hospital). After talking with us about how things are going he pulled up her recent and (many) past xrays. Her curve now is 36 degrees – essentially the same as at diagnosis.
We chatted about what that implied and I pointed out that “had she been wearing a brace” ….. he finished my sentence “we would have attributed the stabilization to bracing”. He went on to say that the goal of bracing is to stabilize a curve and she appears to have a stable curve.
He suggested we come back in a year.
Had we followed our first instincts and listened to the first doctor we saw (who seemed like a competent fellow) my daughter would be wearing a Boston Brace right now (and for another year). After seeing how miserable she was wearing the SpineCor for just 6 weeks I can’t imagine what her life would have been like.
I am not suggesting that bracing doesn’t help or that folks should use our isolated case history as reason to abandon bracing. I am just offering our experience as food for thought. I am saying though that the issue is complex and we don’t know enough yet to be sure we are making the right decisions. In our case, it looks like we spared my daughter the burden of bracing and still achieved the results one would hope for by bracing.
I am indebted to ALL the forum participants here who helped me wade through the issues and literature. In particular those formerly braced folks who helped me understand that bracing is not a trivial path to follow. Sure, I would have "slept better" knowing (hoping) I was doing everything possible to help my daughter but instead I bore the burden of potential guilt and spared my daughter the burden of wearing the brace. Some may say I gambled with my daughters health. I would say I made an educated decision based on available information with no guarantee of a particular outcome.
As we were leaving the exam room I overheard our doctor say to his student …… “There is a reason I am skeptical about bracing”
Just a quick history – She was diagnosed 10 months ago at age 14 with a 38 degree curve. A local doctor said she needed to be braced and wanted to put her in a Boston Brace for 2 years. She was braced briefly in Jan/Feb with the SpineCor but did not achieve a significant inbrace correction.
One of the things that bothered me about my daughters’ situation was the assessment of her maturity by way of Risser; she was Risser 0 at diagnosis however almost 1 year post menarche and had already grown 6 inches taller than my wife. We live near a large metropolitan area with several SRS doctors. We sought a doctor who was not only an SRS physician (suggesting a focus on scoliosis) but also knowledge of skeletal maturity indicators. We were fortunate to find one 80 miles away, indeed this fellow writes many papers on skeletal maturity and, in my opinion, is the perfect doctor to assess my daughters somewhat unique circumstances. (As an aside, he used to practice at a Shriners hospital and used to offer the SpineCor. He is now participating in the Braist trial). We decided in the spring after consultation with this doctor (and incorporating the information about her skeletal maturity based on her hand xray) to “watch and wait”. Yesterday, we went to our appointment with great anxiety (even more so after reading Sharon’s post).
In any event, we went into the consultation room after she had her xray. The doctor soon followed along with a student (intern? Resident? I don’t know, it is a university/teaching hospital). After talking with us about how things are going he pulled up her recent and (many) past xrays. Her curve now is 36 degrees – essentially the same as at diagnosis.
We chatted about what that implied and I pointed out that “had she been wearing a brace” ….. he finished my sentence “we would have attributed the stabilization to bracing”. He went on to say that the goal of bracing is to stabilize a curve and she appears to have a stable curve.
He suggested we come back in a year.
Had we followed our first instincts and listened to the first doctor we saw (who seemed like a competent fellow) my daughter would be wearing a Boston Brace right now (and for another year). After seeing how miserable she was wearing the SpineCor for just 6 weeks I can’t imagine what her life would have been like.
I am not suggesting that bracing doesn’t help or that folks should use our isolated case history as reason to abandon bracing. I am just offering our experience as food for thought. I am saying though that the issue is complex and we don’t know enough yet to be sure we are making the right decisions. In our case, it looks like we spared my daughter the burden of bracing and still achieved the results one would hope for by bracing.
I am indebted to ALL the forum participants here who helped me wade through the issues and literature. In particular those formerly braced folks who helped me understand that bracing is not a trivial path to follow. Sure, I would have "slept better" knowing (hoping) I was doing everything possible to help my daughter but instead I bore the burden of potential guilt and spared my daughter the burden of wearing the brace. Some may say I gambled with my daughters health. I would say I made an educated decision based on available information with no guarantee of a particular outcome.
As we were leaving the exam room I overheard our doctor say to his student …… “There is a reason I am skeptical about bracing”
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