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HomeAbout Prognosis and impactsIncidence and risk factorsSymptomsAnatomy Initial symptomsSymptoms Progression Secondary effectsConditions with similar symptomsCauses and effectsDiagnosis and evaluation Management and treatment CopingResearchConclusion

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Is it a slipped disc? Pinched nerve? Sciatica? Leg Pain May Stem from pinched nerve in the low back

Last updated Wednesday, March 05, 2008

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Symptoms

Anatomy

The pain can radiate in the back, buttocks, thigh, calf, and foot.

Initial symptoms

Typically back pain, either dull or sharp, is the first sign of lumbar radiculitis. Its severity can vary between mild and acute. Numbness and tingling also emerge in the leg and foot.

Symptoms

Symptoms of radiculitis vary between patients, depending on which nerve root is affected. Some patients can experience numbness in the big toe and foot, and others will experience pain at or above the hip, the buttocks, and elsewhere. Pain can be stinging and sharp, or dull. Patients can find it difficult to be comfortable while lying down, sitting up, walking, etc.

Progression

As the irritation of the nerve roots continues, patients can experience a change in the pain’s intensity, frequency or character. Symptoms (pain, numbness, tingling) can worsen over time – or plateau at a level that the patient can manage.

Secondary effects

Lumbar radiculitis could affect a person’s ability to sleep soundly, so could make them more tired and lethargic during periods of acute pain. It could cause them to be absent from work or to reduce participation in activities that give them joy. Pain can affect a person’s disposition, making them feel sad or frustrated or angry. In these ways lumbar radiculitis could affect a person’s relationships.

Conditions with similar symptoms

Several conditions have symptoms similar to lumbar radiculitis (inflammation of a nerve root in the lower spine, causing pain, tingling, numbness or a burning sensation in the back and legs). Outside the spine, a patient’s pain might stem, instead, from inflammation of a hip joint or the sacroiliac joint. Numbness and tingling in the leg and feet can stem from peripheral neuropathy caused by diabetes or a thyroid condition. A strained muscle, such as the gluteal or piriformis, could cause pain in the lower back, buttock and leg.

Metastatic cancer of the spine, perhaps as a soft-tissue tumor, also could cause regional pain. In addition, pain felt in the back may originate in the abdomen or pelvis.

Surgery for Lumbar Radiculitis at the University of Washington

If you are interested in making an appointment to discuss this procedure, you can request an appointment using our online referrals website. To request a referral online, please click here. You can also call 206-598-4288 (outside the Seattle area: 800-440-3280) to make an appointment.


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