Scoliosis can be divided into different types of common: 1, congenital scoliosis; 2, idiopathic scoliosis; 3, neuromuscular scoliosis. In cases where the spinal deformity is already present during the mother’s pregnancy, it is usually a congenital scoliosis. The human spine is composed of 33 vertebrae, and congenital scoliosis can be formed if there is a disorder of vertebral body formation, such as: the vertebrae are only half developed and the other half is not developed, or there is no segmentation between different vertebrae, such as: two adjacent vertebrae grow together or an asymmetrical connection is formed between two adjacent vertebrae. If the vertebrae are not segmented in front of the vertebrae, or if an extra vertebrae grows behind the vertebrae, a kyphotic deformity can develop, which is often referred to as a hunchback. Idiopathic scoliosis is divided into different types depending on the age of onset, such as adolescent scoliosis between the ages of 9 and 18, juvenile scoliosis between the ages of 4 and 9, infantile scoliosis before the age of 3, and adult scoliosis after the age of 18. If the scoliosis occurs due to spinal cord, neurodevelopmental malformation or dysfunction, it is called neuromuscular scoliosis, such as: polio combined with scoliosis, cerebral palsy patients combined with scoliosis.