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Support for Scoliosis and Spine Strength
Scoliosis
Personalized scoliosis physical therapy in Boca Raton to help improve posture, strength, mobility, breathing mechanics, and confidence with movement.
- Scoliosis Therapy
- Posture Support
- Core Strength
- Spine Mobility
- Breathing Mechanics
- Movement Confidence
- Pain Management
- Daily Function
- Boca Raton Scoliosis Physical Therapy
Move With Less Pain
Physical Therapy for Scoliosis
Scoliosis is a sideways curve of the spine that can affect posture, strength, mobility, balance, and comfort. Physical therapy can help improve body awareness, core strength, breathing mechanics, mobility, and daily movement strategies.
Serving Boca Raton and nearby areas, Sophysio creates a plan based on age, curve history, symptoms, goals, and functional needs.
Improved Postural Awareness
Stronger Core Support
Better Mobility
Reduced Muscle Tension
Improved Movement Confidence
Personalized Spine Plan
Move With Confidence
Therapy for Scoliosis, Posture & Spine Mobility
Scoliosis needs vary by person. Common concerns physical therapy can help address:
- Postural Changes
- Back Pain
- Core Weakness
- Muscle Imbalance
- Limited Spine Mobility
- Shoulder or Hip Asymmetry
- Balance and Coordination
- Breathing Mechanics
- Sports Participation
- Daily Movement Confidence
- Strength Maintenance
- Home Exercise Planning
Patient Information
Frequently Asked Questions
scoliosis refers to a spinal curve that may affect posture, strength, mobility, and comfort. A physical therapy evaluation helps identify how strength, mobility, posture, walking, and daily movement may be contributing.
Yes. Physical therapy may help scoliosis by improving mobility, reducing irritation, rebuilding strength, and teaching safer ways to move during daily activity.
Yes. Sophysio helps patients with scoliosis in Boca Raton and nearby areas including Delray Beach, Boynton Beach, and Deerfield Beach.
Your therapist reviews symptoms, medical history, mobility, strength, movement patterns, activity goals, and what makes symptoms better or worse.
Treatment may include postural training, core strengthening, mobility work, breathing-focused exercises, balance training, education, and a home exercise plan.
The timeline depends on symptom severity, how long the issue has been present, your activity level, health history, and consistency with the plan.
Not always. Some activities may need to be modified, but complete rest for too long can increase stiffness and weakness. Your therapist can help you find the right level.
It can, especially if the underlying strength, mobility, workload, or movement factors are not addressed. Therapy focuses on both relief and prevention.
Not always. Many patients start with a physical therapy evaluation first. If symptoms suggest imaging or medical referral is needed, your therapist can guide next steps.
Seek urgent medical care for severe trauma, rapidly worsening symptoms, major weakness, loss of bowel or bladder control, chest pain, fever, or symptoms that feel unusual and serious.
