# The impact of spinal fusion of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis in Salah (Islamic Prayer) movement: a case-control study

**Authors:** Komang Agung Irianto, Naufal Ranadi Firas, Carlos Gracia Supriantono Binti, Damayanti Tinduh, Yudha Mathan Sakti, Brigita De Vega, Yasser Allam

PMC · DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.124255.1 · F1000Research · 2022-09-15

## TL;DR

This study examines how spinal fusion surgery for scoliosis affects the ability of Muslim adolescents to perform Salah prayers, finding that it generally maintains prayer movement quality.

## Contribution

The study introduces prayer quality assessment as an adjuvant to standard questionnaires for evaluating Muslim patients post-surgery.

## Key findings

- Spinal fusion maintains prayer movement quality in most AIS patients.
- Worsened prayer quality correlates with reduced bowing range of motion and higher prostration range of motion.
- SRS-30 scores indicate good functional and pain outcomes post-surgery.

## Abstract

Background: Corrective spine surgery is widely accepted for treating severe adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). Postoperative spinal range of motion (ROM) could be affected after such surgery. In certain populations, such as Muslims, this ROM change can impact daily life, as it may affect the five-times-a-day prayer (Salah). This study aims to assess the influence of spinal fusion (SF) in Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS) during the daily Islamic prayer (Salah).

Methods: SF-AIS patients were videoed while performing Salah prayer. The kinematic documentation was assessed and compared to Salah movements of a control group of age-matched Muslim AIS patients, who had not had surgery. The prayer quality changes were subjectively classified into improved, no change/remained, and worsened, according to the Global Perceived Effect (GPE). Functional outcome and pain were assessed by the Scoliosis Research Society Questionnaire Version 30 (SRS-30).

Results: Thirty-nine women and five men (mean age±SD: 14.8±2.3 years) met the inclusion criteria, and unoperated AIS patients were used as control (twenty-two women, mean age±SD: 15.32±1.43 years). The prostrations ROM of the SF-AIS group differed significantly from the control group (p<0.05). The GPE of the prayer movement showed improvement in 36.4%, no change in 59.1%, and worsening in 4.5% of the SF-AIS patients. The worsened group had a significantly lower bowing ROM and higher prostrations ROM compared to all groups of prayer quality changes (p<0.05). SRS-30 scores showed good outcomes (function 4.0±0.2, pain 4.2±0.5), along with the overall bowing ROM and prostrations ROM (84.2±12.0° and 53.4±9.6°, respectively). Moreover, a significant moderate positive correlation between the bowing ROM and pain (r=0.417, p=0.007) was also found.

Conclusion: Spinal fusion positively affects AIS Islamic patients in maintaining their daily Salah movement, ROM and prayer quality. Prayer quality assessment should be given extra attention as an adjuvant of the SRS-30 questionnaire to evaluate Muslim patients.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (MONDO:0005488), scoliosis (MONDO:0005392)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Spinal fusion (MESH:D000069337), pain (MESH:D010146), AIS (OMIM:181800)
- **Chemicals:** Salah (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11099510/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11099510