Thoracic scoliosis refers to a sideways curve located in the middle (or thoracic) portion of the spine. Scoliosis occurs in the thoracic area more than in other areas. These scoliosis patients notice changes to their chest, rib cage, and shoulder blades appearance.
ICD-10 code: M41. 9 Scoliosis, unspecified | gesund.bund.de.
Takeaway. Dextroscoliosis is the more common form of idiopathic scoliosis, where the spine curves to the right. It has no known cause. Congenital scoliosis that is diagnosed at an early age tends to be more severe, and the curve will most likely worsen as the child grows.
While people are most familiar with three main types of scoliosis, there are actually four types that can develop: congenital, neuromuscular, adolescent idiopathic scoliosis, and adult de novo scoliosis. While these different types have different causes and age groups they affect, they progressive relatively the same.
“Idiopathic” means there is no definite cause. Idiopathic scoliosis is the most common type of scoliosis. It tends to run in families and affects girls eight times as often as it affects boys.
9: Dorsalgia, unspecified.
Levoconvex scoliosis is thoracic levoscoliosis. It is a convex curve in the spine towards the left side. Also, convex refers to the outward bulging of the spine. In this condition, the curved part of the spine is found on the left side of the body.
convex curveSpinal curves The neck (cervical) and low back (lumbar) regions have a slight concave curve, and the thoracic and sacral regions have a gentle convex curve (Fig. 1).
Your thoracic spine is located in the center of your upper and middle back. It begins at the base of your neck (cervical spine) and ends around the bottom of your rib cage, just above your lower back (lumbar spine).
Spine curvature can be a result of two conditions — scoliosis or kyphosis. Though the conditions may be similar, they aren't exactly the same. Scoliosis is a sideways curve of your spine — often taking the shape of the letter 'S' or 'C'.
Scoliosis treatments vary, depending on the severity of the curve. Children who have very mild curves usually don't need any treatment at all, although they may need regular checkups to see if the curve is worsening as they grow. Bracing or surgery may be needed if the spinal curve is moderate or severe.
There are two general categories for scoliosis:Structural scoliosis is by far the most common category of scoliosis. ... Nonstructural scoliosis, also known as functional scoliosis, results from a temporary cause and only involves a side-to-side curvature of the spine (no spinal rotation).