Sciatica | |
---|---|
Other names | Sciatic neuritis, sciatic neuralgia, lumbar radiculopathy, radicular leg pain |
Anterior view showing the sciatic nerve going down the right leg | |
Pronunciation | |
Specialty | Orthopedics, neurology |
Symptoms | Pain going down the leg from the lower back, weakness or numbness of the affected leg[1] |
Complications | Loss of bowel or bladder control[2] |
Usual onset | 40s–50s[2][3] |
Duration | 90% of the time less than 6 weeks[2] |
Causes | Spinal disc herniation, spondylolisthesis, spinal stenosis, piriformis syndrome, pelvic tumor[3][4] |
Diagnostic method | Straight-leg-raising test[3] |
Differential diagnosis | Shingles, diseases of the hip[3] |
Treatment | Pain medications, surgery,[2] physical rehabilitation |
Frequency | 2–40% of people at some time[4] |
Sciatica is pain going down the leg from the lower back.[1] This pain may go down the back, outside, or front of the leg.[3] Onset is often sudden following activities like heavy lifting, though gradual onset may also occur.[5] The pain is often described as shooting.[1] Typically, symptoms are only on one side of the body.[3] Certain causes, however, may result in pain on both sides.[3] Lower back pain is sometimes present.[3] Weakness or numbness may occur in various parts of the affected leg and foot.[3]
About 90% of sciatica is due to a spinal disc herniation pressing on one of the lumbar or sacral nerve roots.[4] Spondylolisthesis, spinal stenosis, piriformis syndrome, pelvic tumors, and pregnancy are other possible causes of sciatica.[3] The straight-leg-raising test is often helpful in diagnosis.[3] The test is positive if, when the leg is raised while a person is lying on their back, pain shoots below the knee.[3] In most cases medical imaging is not needed.[2] However, imaging may be obtained if bowel or bladder function is affected, there is significant loss of feeling or weakness, symptoms are long standing, or there is a concern for tumor or infection.[2] Conditions that may present similarly are diseases of the hip and infections such as early shingles (prior to rash formation).[3]
Initial treatment typically involves pain medications.[2] However, evidence for effectiveness of the pain medication and muscle relaxants is lacking.[6] It is generally recommended that people continue with normal activity to the best of their abilities.[3] Often all that is required for sciatica resolution is time; in about 90% of people symptoms resolve in less than six weeks.[2] If the pain is severe and lasts for more than six weeks, surgery may be an option.[2] While surgery often speeds pain improvement, its long term benefits are unclear.[3] Surgery may be required if complications occur, such as loss of normal bowel or bladder function.[2] Many treatments, including corticosteroids, gabapentin, pregabalin, acupuncture, heat or ice, and spinal manipulation, have limited or poor evidence for their use.[3][7][8]
Depending on how it is defined, less than 1% to 40% of people have sciatica at some point in time.[4][9] Sciatica is most common between the ages of 40 and 59, and men are more frequently affected than women.[2][3] The condition has been known since ancient times.[3] The first known modern use of the word sciatica dates from 1451,[10] although Dioscorides (1st-century CE) mentions it in his Materia Medica.[11]