There are many causes of scoliosis, no less than dozens of them, and the cause is still unclear. The incidence of scoliosis is highest in adolescents, with a general incidence of two to three percent, and is higher in women than in men. Medical science broadly classifies scoliosis as congenital and idiopathic. Congenital scoliosis refers to abnormalities in the bony structure of the spine, i.e., abnormal structures such as triangular hemivertebrae, butterfly vertebrae, fused vertebrae, and fused ribs connected to the thoracic vertebrae, resulting in a tilted spine, leading to scoliosis or kyphosis. Congenital scoliosis is often associated with spinal cord deformities such as dural effusion, spinal cord longitudinal fracture, or spinal cord cavity. Because spinal deformities can be combined with spinal nerve abnormalities, treatment of congenital scoliosis is more difficult and more dangerous. Idiopathic scoliosis accounts for 70% to 80% of scoliosis patients, these patients are born with a normal spine, with the body’s development, due to the imbalance of neuromuscular forces, resulting in the original should be physiological curvature of the spine into pathological curvature, that is, the original thoracic backbone into a lateral convexity, etc..