What Is Lumbar Spinal Stenosis and What Are Its Symptoms?
Lumbar spinal stenosis is the narrowing of the spinal canal in the lower back — through age-related degenerative changes such as disc bulging, facet joint enlargement, and ligament thickening — leaving no room for the nerves within it. The most typical symptom is neurogenic claudication: after walking for a while, the patient feels pain, numbness, heaviness, or weakness in the legs and finds relief on sitting or bending forward (for example, leaning on a shopping trolley). Morning stiffness in the back and discomfort that increases with standing may also be seen. Diagnosis is made by evaluating examination and lumbar MRI together; however, the degree of narrowing on imaging does not always match the severity of complaints exactly, so clinical findings take priority.
Non-Surgical Treatments — Exercise, Physiotherapy and Lifestyle
The basis of non-surgical treatment in canal narrowing is suitably selected exercise and physiotherapy. Programmes that strengthen the trunk (core) muscles in particular and teach keeping the back in slight forward flexion can reduce symptoms, because bending forward relatively widens the canal and provides relief. Weight control, programmes that gradually increase walking distance, and pain-inflammation management when needed are also part of this step. This approach does not anatomically eliminate the narrowing, but in many patients it keeps symptoms at a manageable level for years and may delay or render surgery unnecessary. The important thing is that the programme be planned individually and gradually.
Epidural Injection and Interventional Options
In patients who do not respond sufficiently to exercise and physiotherapy, with prominent leg-radiating pain but no findings requiring urgent surgery, an epidural (caudal/transforaminal) steroid injection may be an intermediate step; the aim is to reduce inflammation and swelling around the nerve, widen the walking window, and ease physiotherapy. Honest framing: the injection does not widen the narrowed canal; its effect may be temporary and does not work in every patient. In canal narrowing, interventional methods are a tool for symptom management rather than a 'cure'; they are valuable in the right patient but do not replace surgery in progressive neurological loss.
When Is Surgery (Decompression) Needed?
Although non-surgical methods are valuable in canal narrowing, in some situations surgery (decompression — an operation that makes room for the nerves) comes to the fore and should not be delayed: progressive muscle weakness, a walking distance that becomes increasingly short and seriously limits daily life, resistant pain that impairs quality of life, or emergency findings such as deterioration in bladder/bowel control. Here one must be honest: in advanced and symptomatic narrowing, surgery can provide more lasting relief than non-surgical methods. The decision is made by evaluating the patient's clinical picture, the degree of walking limitation, and MRI findings together; the aim is neither unnecessary surgery nor delayed intervention.
Recovery, Expectations and an Honest Framing
Because canal narrowing is mostly a degenerative (age-related) process, realistic expectations matter. The aim of non-surgical treatment is not to 'cure the narrowing' but to keep symptoms at a manageable level and preserve walking distance and quality of life. No 'definite and lasting cure' can be promised for any method. Regularly maintaining exercise and correct posture, weight control, and staying active are determinants for the long term whatever method is applied. The treatment plan is set up individually, not in haste, by evaluating clinical findings and imaging together.