Teen Girl Stands Tall Again After Life-Changing Spine Surgery at Wockhardt Hospitals, Mumbai Central

Mumbai: A 16-year-old schoolgirl walked into Wockhardt Hospitals, Mumbai Central, with a shy smile hiding her pain. Her friends teased her because her blouse never sat straight. She couldn’t sit long without discomfort, and her mother worried endlessly.
The reason: severe scoliosis – a spinal deformity where the backbone curves like a bow instead of standing tall.
While mild curves can be managed with observation or braces, hers was extreme. Her spine was bent from the chest down to the lower back, affecting 12 vertebrae – nearly her entire spine. Without correction, her posture, confidence, and even her breathing could worsen with age. Surgery was the only way forward.
Under the care of Dr. Mazda Turel, Consultant Brain and Spine Surgeon at Wockhardt Hospitals, the complex corrective surgery began. Through a midline incision, screws and rods were carefully placed along her spine, gently rotating and straightening each twisted vertebra.
Bit by bit, the curve dissolved. What had once been a crooked silhouette now stood aligned – shoulders level, waist restored, and balance regained.
Three days later, she stood up for the first time with her new posture. “I look taller!” she exclaimed, delighted. Her mother’s eyes filled with tears – years of fear finally replaced by relief.
The journey wasn’t without its lighter teenage moments. Immobility and painkillers slowed her bowels, and by day seven she joyfully announced what she called her “greatest relief” – a successful trip to the washroom. For her, it wasn’t just surgery; it was regaining both her height and her humour.
“This surgery is not just about straightening a spine. It’s about giving a young girl the chance to walk into her college years without feeling different, to carry herself with confidence,” said Dr. Turel.
Ten days after surgery, she walked out of the hospital taller, straighter, and smiling wider than ever before.
This case is a reminder that scoliosis is more than a physical curve. With timely intervention, it can be corrected – restoring not just posture but also the joy of standing tall in