Non-Surgical Scoliosis Treatment
What Scoliosis Actually Is (Biomechanically)
Scoliosis is a three-dimensional spinal condition, not simply a lateral curve. It involves:
- frontal plane deviation (Cobb angle)
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vertebral rotation (axial plane)
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sagittal alignment changes (cervical, thoracic, lumbar relationships)
These factors alter:
- spinal loading patterns
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muscular demand
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balance and postural control
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long-term mechanical stress
How Our Approach Differs (Mechanical vs Symptom-Based)
Traditional pathways often emphasize:
- observation
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bracing
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surgical thresholds
Our approach evaluates modifiable biomechanical drivers, including:
- asymmetric loading and compensation patterns
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cervical–thoracic sagittal relationships
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neuromuscular control and postural reflexes
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curve-specific structural adaptations
This allows for active, conservative intervention when clinically appropriate.
What Care May Include
Care is individualized and may integrate:
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CLEAR Institute scoliosis rehabilitation principles
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Chiropractic BioPhysics (CBP) structural correction
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scoliosis-specific exercise protocols
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traction and positional loading strategies
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neuromuscular retraining (including Back Genius systems)
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home-based care for consistency
When indicated, collaboration with bracing systems such as:
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ScoliBrace
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SpineCor
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ISICO-informed approaches
may be incorporated.
Clinical Research & Evidence Integration
Care is informed by peer-reviewed research authored by Dr. Justin M. Dick examining:
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scoliosis biomechanics and cervical mechanics
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sagittal alignment relationships
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outcomes following structured non-surgical rehabilitation
Published case series and reports demonstrate measurable radiographic and functional changes in selected patients.
Important:
This reflects evidence-informed care—not guaranteed outcomes.
Who This Is For
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adolescents with scoliosis
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adults with postural or functional concerns
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patients seeking non-surgical options
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second-opinion consultations
Who This May NOT Be For
Referral or co-management may be appropriate for:
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severe curves requiring surgical consultation
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progressive neurological compromise
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unstable spinal conditions
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medical or surgical priority cases
What to Expect
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consultation and history review
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biomechanical and functional examination
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imaging review (if available)
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clear explanation of findings
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individualized care plan
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scheduled reassessment
Schedule a Consultation
Serving Charlotte, Berewick, Steele Creek, and South Charlotte
https://clearlifescoliosis.com
FAQ
Can scoliosis be treated without surgery?
In selected cases, conservative care may improve function, posture, and potentially influence curve behavior. Surgical care remains appropriate in certain situations.
Does scoliosis always progress?
No. Progression depends on growth, curve pattern, and biomechanical factors.
Is treatment standardized?
No. Care is individualized based on structure, function, and patient goals.