Braces constructed to replace the patient's own sensory tricks may help reduce abnormal posture.
There is no way known to prevent torticollis.
No. However, spasmodic torticollis is quite a painful condition (in the neck).
Torticollis most commonly begins between age 30-60, with females affected twice as often as males. According to the National Spasmodic Torticollis Association, torticollis affects 83,000 people in the United States.
Invisible braces should be treated like regular braces. You have to keep them in at all times and only take them off for eating and brushing.
It is better for your treatment if you stick to the same orthodontist.
Also known as a wry neck, spasmodic torticollis is a stiff neck due to spasmodic contraction of the neck muscle. The spasm causes the head to be pulled toward the affected side.
Torticollis is the medical term meaning wryneck. Torticollis is a type of spasm of the neck that bends it into an unnatural position. Torticollis is a type of focal Dystonia, which is a neurological disorder of the basal ganglia in the brain.The medical term for wryneck is torticollis, which is a stiff neck due to muscle spasm.
Congenital torticollis occurs when the neck muscle that runs up and toward the back of the baby's neck (sternocleidomastoid muscle) is shortened. This brings your baby's head down and to one side. This is known as congenital muscular torticollis
No
Wryneck
Torticollis or "wry neck" is spasm of the sternocleidomastoid. You would massage the SCM along with the scalenes, trapezius, and splenius muscles.
Peter G Jones has written: 'Torticollis in infancy and childhood' -- subject(s): Diseases, Children, Torticollis