From Deseret News archives:
Scoliosis: What treatments may lie ahead?
- Page:
- < Previous
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
The disease is five times more common in females. The fact that fewer males have it may mean that "boys have something protective" that girls lack. It appears to follow an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance.
Ogilvie and Braun believe a genetic test will say a lot about how severe the scoliosis will ultimately be. Perhaps, Braun speculates, something in the body that preserves symmetry goes awry with scoliosis, and that could be exploited for treatment.
Maybe it would mean adding a dietary treatment like folate, as is done with certain metabolic diseases. Perhaps it would work like an insulin pump with diabetes, some substance added to correct something that's missing or misdirected. "It has to be some cellular and protein alteration" that could be treated, he said.
"Scoliosis is a disease that begs to be impacted in as many ways as possible friendlier interventions, cellular, pharmacological . . . ."
Still, as second, third, even fourth generations of mechanical "fixes" travel through the process of becoming marketable, Ogilvie predicts that the gene test and subsequent treatment will get there first.
So although Lily's parents worry about a treatment plan that seems to stretch out indefinitely, with its time off for appointments and the fitting and refitting for a new brace as she grows, the expense, the sheer frustration of not knowing the outcome early, Braun encourages them to give the brace a chance to help the little girl and to buy her time until something better comes along.
It will come, he promises.
E-mail: lois@desnews.com
- Page:
- < Previous
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
Recent comments
I think it's amazing what they are finding out about scoliosis and...
Marjorie Freund | June 11, 2009 at 1:33 p.m.
- Teen girl killed in Kaysville crash 1:22 a.m.
- 1A All-state honorable mention 1:19 a.m.
- 2A All-state honorable mention 1:12 a.m.
- 3A All-state honorable mention 1:10 a.m.
- 4A All-state honorable mention 1:02 a.m.
- 5A All-state honorable mention 12:59 a.m.
- HIV study asks BYU biologist to help 12:57 a.m.
- Orem pair getting a rep for crime 12:56 a.m.
- McCoy to resign from Utah Senate 12:55 a.m.
- USU vs. BYU this decade 12:54 a.m.
- 2 citations issued at Y.-U. game
- BYU says Hall incident resolved
- Max Hall: a fixture in rivalry lore
- Witness: Mitchell wanted attention
- 'Grandfamilies' a growing trend
- Mitchell called intelligent, controlling
- MWC '09 season in review
- Jazz win 6th in 7 games
- Jazz ready to be without Harpring
- Daughter: Mitchell fed me my pet
- Hall mouths off about hate of Utah
904 - Cougars beat Utes in overtime
482 - Hall reprimanded by MWC
402 - Max Hall issues apology
387 - Hall's pain reflects self-betrayal
347 - Utes won't respond to Hall
275 - BYU says Hall incident resolved
236 - 2 citations issued at Y.-U. game
161 - BYU is champion of the state
143 - Religion in politics is tiresome
129
My husband was teaching his 6th-grade class in Salt Lake last year when...
Sunkist Growers and Fresh Market, a new division of Associated Food...
You would obviously only have second hand information about Obama's foreign...
I don't understand why we can't destroy opium fields, and cut off other main...
You need to join Dennis as co-poster child in the, "Max was actually right,"...
As an active member and Past Master of the Blue Lodge, and as the lone active...
Just get feztheb more minutes.
I remember as a student at BYU, President Jeffrey R. Holland reprimanding the...
Tired, not because he's not conservative enough (which he isn't), but because...
Sure. President Obama uses the fear card in an attempt to help the american...
Okurs not that bad when he isn't tired, or trying to save his energy; its...




