christinad
New member
Hi there,
Welcome to the boarRAB!
I'm curious, does he want to do surgery for the scoliosis or the spondy or what?
You most definetely need to seek a second and third opinion. Especially if your scoliosis is that serious.
I had surgery for scoliosis when I was 17, I am 27 now and when I went through all of that, I never had an MRI but that was because I had no pain yet and my curvature was very visible on x-ray and that is what they were operating on.
So, are they operating on the spondy or the scoliosis?
If your scoliosis is so severe that they are straightening the curve and doing a fusion, that would take care of the spondy also and that may be what this doctor is referring to. But, I had went to get a second and third opinion and I suggest that would be the best thing. Never just refer to one doctor. There is alot to watch out for when it comes to a decision like this.
Don't think because you have surgery the rest of your life is ruined. Think positive, you will be fine.
Keep me posted on what you decide and what your doctors say. What is your degree of curvature and what levels are affected?
I suggest a good spine specialist who specializes in scoliosis. This may help, type in "scoliosis research society" in your browser and in one of those sites you will find a doctor listing of who is a meraber of this group in your city.
Good luck and keep in touch.
Christina
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27 years old:Complete thoracic fusion (13 levels)at age 17 due to scoliosis: Now, suffer from DDD in lurabar and sacroilliac joints, torn and ruptured discs, facet joint problems and arthritis of course in the remaining vertebre that are unfused.
[This message has been edited by ChristinaD (edited 02-18-2003).]
Welcome to the boarRAB!
I'm curious, does he want to do surgery for the scoliosis or the spondy or what?
You most definetely need to seek a second and third opinion. Especially if your scoliosis is that serious.
I had surgery for scoliosis when I was 17, I am 27 now and when I went through all of that, I never had an MRI but that was because I had no pain yet and my curvature was very visible on x-ray and that is what they were operating on.
So, are they operating on the spondy or the scoliosis?
If your scoliosis is so severe that they are straightening the curve and doing a fusion, that would take care of the spondy also and that may be what this doctor is referring to. But, I had went to get a second and third opinion and I suggest that would be the best thing. Never just refer to one doctor. There is alot to watch out for when it comes to a decision like this.
Don't think because you have surgery the rest of your life is ruined. Think positive, you will be fine.
Keep me posted on what you decide and what your doctors say. What is your degree of curvature and what levels are affected?
I suggest a good spine specialist who specializes in scoliosis. This may help, type in "scoliosis research society" in your browser and in one of those sites you will find a doctor listing of who is a meraber of this group in your city.
Good luck and keep in touch.
Christina
------------------
27 years old:Complete thoracic fusion (13 levels)at age 17 due to scoliosis: Now, suffer from DDD in lurabar and sacroilliac joints, torn and ruptured discs, facet joint problems and arthritis of course in the remaining vertebre that are unfused.
[This message has been edited by ChristinaD (edited 02-18-2003).]