What Is an Epidural Steroid Injection and How Is It Done?
The procedure is performed without open surgery, under imaging guidance (fluoroscopy or ultrasound). A thin needle is directed into the epidural space just outside the membrane surrounding the spinal cord, where a cortisone-type steroid mixed with a local anaesthetic is delivered. There are two common approaches: in the caudal approach the needle enters at the tailbone level so the medication spreads over a wide area; in the transforaminal approach the medication is placed closer to the target, at the opening where the compressed nerve root exits. The aim is to reduce inflammation and swelling around the nerve root and calm pain transmission. It is usually completed quickly under local anaesthesia. The key point: the injection does not repair the disc or remove the herniated fragment; it aims for indirect relief by reducing inflammation.
Who Is Suitable and Who Is Not?
A more suitable candidate is a patient with prominent leg (radicular) pain from a disc herniation or canal narrowing, who has not responded sufficiently to medication and physiotherapy but does not yet have findings requiring urgent surgery. By contrast, if there are emergency findings such as progressive muscle weakness, foot drop, or loss of bladder/bowel control, time should not be lost with an injection; in these patients surgery that directly relieves nerve compression comes to the fore. The effect may also be limited in large, free-fragment herniations. So the expectation that 'an injection will fix it' does not fit every patient. The determinant of success is choosing the right patient and the true source of pain.
Relation to Other Interventional Methods
An epidural injection is only one part of the non-surgical interventional ladder. If the source of pain is disc and nerve-root inflammation, an epidural block makes sense; but if the pain comes from the facet joints behind the vertebrae, facet injection or radiofrequency denervation may be appropriate, and in selected intradiscal-pressure cases nucleoplasty may be considered. These methods are not rivals; it is a matter of choosing the right tool for the right patient. Which method is appropriate is decided after clarifying the source of pain through examination, imaging, and where needed diagnostic blocks.
When Does It Make Sense, When Is Surgery Needed?
Treatment is approached in steps: medication, correct exercise, and physiotherapy are tried first. In patients who have not responded sufficiently to these steps but in whom a clear indication for open surgery has not yet formed, an epidural injection is a reasonable intermediate step; by easing the pain it may allow the patient to do physiotherapy comfortably. However, if there is progressive neurological loss, resistant pain that seriously limits daily life, or emergency findings, surgery should not be delayed. The point is neither to belittle nor to overstate the injection: in the right patient it may prevent unnecessary surgery, while in the wrong patient it may delay the real treatment.
Recovery, Expectations and Risks
The effect often begins within a few days and may last for weeks; a single session is enough for some patients, while others may need repetition at certain intervals. The realistic picture: if patient selection is correct, meaningful relief can be seen, but the effect may not be permanent, and the injection is part of the process rather than a 'cure' on its own. No procedure is risk-free; rarely, infection, transient headache, fluctuations in blood sugar/pressure, or temporary numbness may occur, and these are discussed during informed consent. No 'guaranteed cure' can be promised for any method; in the long term weight control, back hygiene, and regular exercise are necessary for lasting recovery.