My client's 12-year-old daughter has severe scoliosis. She's worn a brace before, but she is still growing and is at risk of significant worsening. She has frequent back pain and her movement potential is significantly compromised. Her Cobb angles are both in excess of 50 degrees.
My client has brought her daughter to work with me a couple of times over the last few months. We have focused on simple exercises and stretches, both assisted and unassisted, that the daughter can perform at home on a regular basis. I am primarily using methods drawn from Circular Strength Training and Active Isolated Stretching and Strengthening, two complementary approaches to health-first exercise.
Over the last few months, the daughter has greatly improved functional ROM in her shoulders, somewhat improved her neck and pelvic ROM, and slightly improved her spinal ROM. Significantly, she went from being unable to balance on one leg to now being able to balance on one leg while performing various movements with the other leg.
Her overall strength endurance in the exercises given has improved dramatically, and we've increased the difficulty of her "homework" in complexity and volume, with emphasis on reducing differences between Left and Right-sided performance.
The daughter is a joy to work with, and she's a quick study with sharp observational skills despite some other medical challenges. Her mother says the child's massage therapist and other medical pros have commented on improvements in her muscle tone and function. We have discussed the possibility of writing a short article at some point in the future, but we have no "Before" pics, so we'll eventually need updated x-rays and Cobb angles for comparison. I'd prefer to see her make much greater progress before attempting to draw any conclusions. At this time there are no published studies of how the methods I am using impact the development of scoliotic adolescents... so this whole process is principle-based, with careful reassessment each time I get to work with the daughter.
If I massaged this child, I would focus on Swedish, fascial work, and AIS. Due to her other challenges, I doubt she'd be able to tolerate structural work.