It is highly unlikely thoracic scoliosis would be the result of a car accident or any other sudden injury.
Scoliosis is a condition that develops over a long period of time, often from birth, not from a sudden accident or injury.
It is described as primarily, up to 75 to 90 percent "idiopathic", meaning there is no known identifiable cause. Up to 15 percent are believed congenital, Means inherited genetic disorder and up to 10 percent are believed to be symptomatic or resulting from an existing associative neuromuscular disorder.
It's most likely that you have already had the condition for a very long period of time possibly since birth but as you described it as "mild". it was just never noticed before.
Mild Thoracic Scoliosis (slight curvature) generally presents no symptoms and requires no treatment. It is believed by some that up to 10 or 20 percent of the global population would show some slight scoliosis if everyone were checked for it.
AnswerThe answer is yes, as you may have had this as a kid but it was never noticed,A car accident can actually trigger this to become more noticeable or wake it up,
The trauma could trigger scoliosis and where it was having no effect could suddenly come to light,
Of course. Talk to your specialist.
Well, scoliosis is a curvature of the spine. The cervicothoracic part deals with the location of the curve. The cervical region is the neck, and the thoracic is the upper back. So the cervicothoracic scoliosis would be a curvature of the spine in the neck/upper back
This is scoliosis in the cervical (neck area) and thoracic (upper back) regions of the spine.
Thoracic pain can have various causes like poor posture, strenuous bending as well as degenerated core muscles. Apart from that, the other cause that can originate pain in the upper back could be twisting of the upper part of the back and prolonged sitting. One of the most serious causes of thoracic pain is scoliosis.
It can I have mild scoliosis and I have noticed when my back hurts is when some of the swelling starts.
Your thoracic cavity starts from the upper margin of the thoracic vertebra to upper margin of the manubrium of the sternum. There is your diaphragm on the lower side.
Superior thoracic aperture
Upper thoracic region
Posterior thoracic.
yes
The term kyphosis, refers to an abnormal and exaggerated rounding of the spine. To use an example, the Hunchback of Notre Dame had kyphosis. Kyphosis refers to the normal convex curvature of the spine as it occurs in the thoracic and sacral regions.
Posterior thoracic.
The thoracic region is basically the chest and upper back. In the neck it begins at T-1 of the vertebra. The thoracic area extends to the last rib, front and back.