Lumbar Spinal Stenosis - Treatment Overview
Lumbar Spinal Stenosis is narrowing of the spinal canal that usually starts gradually and develops over a long period of time. As the spinal canal narrows, it can squeeze (compress) and irritate the nerve roots that branch out from the spinal cord
, or it can squeeze and irritate the spinal cord itself. The goal of treatment for spinal stenosis is to relieve pain, numbness, and weakness in the legs and improve your ability to function and your quality of life. Treatment includes pain-relieving medication, exercises, and other nonsurgical measures, and in some cases, surgical treatment.
Initial treatment
Unless your Lumbar Spinal Stenosis is severe, initial treatment usually is aimed at relieving your symptoms without surgery. Most cases do not require surgery. Nonsurgical treatment often works to allow most normal activity and relieve mild to moderate symptoms of pain, numbness, and weakness in the legs.3 Nonsurgical treatment includes:
- Education about the course of your condition and how to relieve symptoms.
- Medications to relieve pain and inflammation, such as acetaminophen and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs).
- Exercise, to maintain or achieve overall good health. Aerobic exercise-especially riding a stationary bicycle (which allows you to lean forward)-can relieve symptoms.
- Weight loss, to relieve symptoms and slow progression of the stenosis.
- Physical therapy, to provide education, instruction, and support for your self-care. Physical therapy helps you learn stretching and strengthening exercises that may lead to a decrease in pain and other symptoms.
- An epidural steroid injection (ESI) to reduce severe leg pain. This injection includes a combination of a corticosteroid and local anesthetic pain relief medicine. This may be tried when other nonsurgical treatments have failed to relieve severe leg pain. These injections are not usually used for pain that is mostly in the back.
If you have symptoms of cervical spinal stenosis, testing and treatment may be done earlier than in treatment for Lumbar Spinal Stenosis.
Ongoing treatment
Lumbar Spinal Stenosis often requires nonsurgical treatment on an ongoing basis. Treatment may include:
- Medications to relieve pain and inflammation, such as acetaminophen and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs).
- Exercise, which is important for overall good health. Aerobic exercise-especially riding a stationary bicycle (which allows you to lean forward)-can relieve symptoms.
- Maintaining a healthy body weight, which may relieve symptoms and slow the progression of the stenosis.
- Physical therapy, to provide education, instruction, and support for your self-care. Physical therapy helps you learn stretching and strengthening exercises that may lead to a decrease in pain and other symptoms.
If medications, exercise, and physical therapy do not relieve your symptoms, your health professional may recommend an epidural steroid injection (ESI). This injection includes a combination of a corticosteroid and a local anesthetic pain relief medicine. These injections are used for pain that occurs mostly in the legs.
