Causes and Management of Hyperkyphosis

Almujel, Khaled Nasser and Almhmd, Abdalah Emad and Alharfy, Abdulrahman Arshed N. and Albalawi, Ibrahim Abdullah Said and Alanazi, Tariq Bander F. and Alshehri, Aysha Jaber and Alatawi, Bedour Eid H. and Alshehri, Abdullah Dhafer and Alhawiti, Meshari Salman and Alshehri, Shumoukh Homoud (2021) Causes and Management of Hyperkyphosis. Journal of Pharmaceutical Research International, 33 (35B). pp. 1-8. ISSN 2456-9119

[thumbnail of sciencedomain,+Alatawi3335B2021JPRI70144.pdf] Text
sciencedomain,+Alatawi3335B2021JPRI70144.pdf - Published Version

Download (200kB)

Abstract

Hyperkyphosis is identified when kyphosis angle exceeds the normal ranges. In overall, hyperkyphosis upsurges with age, particularly after the age of 40. It arises as a consequence of multifactorial causes and is associated with increased health susceptibility. Separately from the penalties of typical aging, as declining muscle power and degenerative vicissitudes of the spine, additional influences lead to the growth of the kyphosis angle. Besides fractures, other adverse health outcomes associated with hyperkyphosis include worsening physical function, falls and earlier mortality. Given the growing older population and the high prevalence of age-related hyperkyphosis, better delineation of associated ill-health outcomes will help inform the development and testing of effective kyphosis managements. The sequence of handling with kyphosis start conventional and rolling to surgical interference as a previous option if the patient’s symptoms do not recover with conventional treatment or if the curving is too significant.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: OA STM Library > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@oastmlibrary.com
Date Deposited: 04 Apr 2023 06:11
Last Modified: 17 Jun 2024 06:52
URI: http://geographical.openscholararchive.com/id/eprint/440

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item