Lumbar Stenosis

Most spine pain never needs surgery. OSI evaluates you, orders imaging only when it will actually change the plan, and walks you through the non-operative care that handles the vast majority of spine problems — activity guidance, physical therapy, medications, and bracing.

Overview

what it is and why it matters
Lumbar spinal stenosis on MRI. Jmarchn 2021 CC BY-SA 3.0.

Lumbar spinal stenosis is narrowing of the spinal canal in your lower back, leaving less room for the nerves. It's the most common reason patients over 65 end up needing spine surgery. The narrowing builds up over decades from the same group of normal aging changes — the discs thin out, the small joints in the back of the spine enlarge, and the ligaments inside the canal thicken. None of those changes is dramatic on its own; together they slowly squeeze the space the nerves run through.

The hallmark symptom is a distinctive pattern called neurogenic claudication: aching leg pain, heaviness, or numbness that comes on after you've been walking or standing for a few minutes — and that gets better as soon as you sit down or lean forward (the "grocery cart sign," because patients often instinctively lean on a shopping cart for relief). That positional pattern is what distinguishes stenosis from leg pain caused by poor circulation, which improves with rest regardless of body position.

Symptoms

what you may notice

The hallmark is leg pain, heaviness, or numbness that builds after you walk or stand for several minutes and then eases as soon as you sit down or lean forward. Many patients instinctively lean on a shopping cart for relief — the "grocery cart sign." Your walking distance gradually shrinks over months to years as the canal narrows further. Low back stiffness and aching are common but usually take a backseat to the leg symptoms.

Symptoms can affect one or both legs and may include tingling, a "pins and needles" sensation, or a feeling that your legs are about to give out. Uphill walking and cycling (both slightly forward-bent postures) tend to be easier than walking on flat ground or downhill. Emergency: sudden bilateral leg weakness, saddle-area numbness, or loss of bladder or bowel control warrants an immediate trip to the emergency department.

Diagnosis

exam first, imaging second

MRI shows how narrow the canal has become and at which levels — that determines which nerves are likely involved. A CT myelogram (a CT scan with contrast injected around the cord) is used when MRI isn't an option. In older patients with leg symptoms, your surgeon will also screen for poor circulation in the legs (with a simple blood-pressure measurement at the ankles) — the symptoms can mimic stenosis and need different treatment. Critically, the diagnosis is a clinical one — imaging findings have to match your symptom pattern.

Treatment Path

how care progresses at OSI
1

Physical therapy

Forward-bending exercises (which open up the narrowed segments), core strengthening, and aquatic therapy — water reduces the load on the spine while letting you work the muscles.

2

NSAIDs

NSAIDs like ibuprofen or naproxen for acute flares of pain.

3

Activity modification

Stationary cycling (which keeps you slightly bent forward) is usually well-tolerated. Walking uphill — also a slightly forward-bent posture — is generally easier than walking downhill, which forces a more upright back.

If Surgery Is Truly Needed

rare for most patients

Surgery helps only a small minority of spine patients — usually those with a specific structural problem plus a nerve issue that isn’t getting better with a structured non-operative trial. When that step is genuinely warranted, OSI coordinates it the same way we coordinate every other part of your care: imaging, records, and the handoff are handled for you, so no part of the process falls on your shoulders.

Emergency. Bilateral leg weakness, saddle numbness, or loss of bladder or bowel control is a surgical emergency — go to the nearest emergency department rather than waiting for a clinic appointment.

Further Reading

authoritative sources

External patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:

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