Lumbar spinal stenosis is the most common form of spinal stenosis — and the one most likely to bring patients into Dr. Veselak’s office. It develops in the lower back, where the spinal canal narrows and puts pressure on the bundle of nerve roots that control function in the legs, hips, and bladder. When those nerves are compressed, the result can range from mild back stiffness to severe, disabling pain that makes walking even a short distance impossible.
Understanding what lumbar spinal stenosis actually is — what’s narrowing, why it developed, and what’s generating your specific symptoms — is the first step toward finding real, lasting relief. Here is what you need to know.
What Is Lumbar Spinal Stenosis?
The lumbar spine consists of five vertebrae (L1–L5) stacked between the thoracic spine above and the sacrum below. Running through the center of these vertebrae is the spinal canal — a protected tunnel for the spinal cord and, in the lower lumbar segments, the cauda equina (the bundle of nerve roots that descend to supply the legs and pelvic organs).
Lumbar spinal stenosis occurs when this canal narrows. Narrowing can happen in three locations:
- Central canal stenosis — narrowing of the main spinal canal, compressing the cauda equina
- Lateral recess stenosis — narrowing of the area where nerve roots exit the canal before entering the foramina
- Foraminal stenosis — narrowing of the individual openings (foramina) through which each nerve root exits the spine
Many patients have a combination of these. The specific location and degree of narrowing shapes the pattern of symptoms experienced.
Symptoms of Lumbar Spinal Stenosis
The hallmark feature of lumbar stenosis — the one that distinguishes it from other causes of back pain — is that symptoms worsen with standing and walking, and improve with sitting or leaning forward. This positional pattern reflects the mechanics of the canal: extension (standing upright) narrows it further, while flexion (sitting, bending forward) opens it slightly.
Specific symptoms include:
- Low back pain or aching that worsens after standing for several minutes
- Neurogenic claudication — cramping, burning, heaviness, or weakness in one or both legs after walking a certain distance, relieved by rest or leaning forward
- Pain, tingling, or numbness radiating into the buttocks, thighs, calves, or feet
- Leg weakness that makes climbing stairs or rising from a chair difficult
- Balance difficulties and increased risk of falling
- The “shopping cart sign” — relief when leaning on a cart, walker, or railing, because the flexed posture temporarily decompresses the canal
- Bladder urgency or frequency in more significant cases where S2–S4 nerve roots are involved
It is important to distinguish neurogenic claudication (caused by nerve compression) from vascular claudication (caused by reduced blood flow to the legs). Both cause leg pain with walking, but vascular claudication typically does not improve with leaning forward and does not have the same association with spinal position. A thorough clinical examination can distinguish between the two.
What Causes Lumbar Spinal Stenosis?
Lumbar stenosis rarely has a single cause. It typically develops over years as multiple degenerative processes converge on the same spinal segments:
Degenerative Disc Disease
As intervertebral discs lose water content and height with age, the distance between vertebrae decreases. This causes the disc to bulge outward, reduces the height of the foraminal openings, and increases load on the facet joints. Disc dehydration is accelerated by chronic inflammation, poor nutrition, smoking, and sedentary habits.
Facet Joint Arthritis and Hypertrophy
The facet joints at the back of each vertebra bear more stress when disc height is lost. Osteoarthritis develops in these joints, causing them to enlarge (hypertrophy) and produce bone spurs (osteophytes) that protrude into the canal and foramina.
Ligamentum Flavum Thickening
The ligamentum flavum runs along the back wall of the spinal canal. With age and mechanical stress, it thickens and loses elasticity, bulging into the canal — particularly during extension. Ligament thickening is one of the most significant contributors to central canal stenosis.
Spondylolisthesis
Spondylolisthesis occurs when one vertebra slips forward over the one below it, narrowing the canal at that level. It is particularly common at L4–L5 in older adults and significantly compounds stenosis from other causes.
Congenital Narrow Canal
Some individuals are born with a smaller than average spinal canal. This predisposes them to developing symptomatic stenosis earlier and with less structural degeneration than would otherwise be required.
Which Spinal Levels Are Most Commonly Affected?
Lumbar stenosis most frequently occurs at L4–L5 and L3–L4 — the segments that bear the greatest mechanical load in the lumbar spine. L5–S1 is also commonly involved. Compression at different levels produces different symptom patterns:
- L3–L4 — thigh weakness, reduced knee reflex, anterior thigh pain or numbness
- L4–L5 — foot drop, weakness in toe extension, pain into the outer calf and top of foot
- L5–S1 — weakness in calf and foot plantar flexion, reduced ankle reflex, pain into the back of the leg and sole of foot
Diagnosing Lumbar Spinal Stenosis
Diagnosis is based on a combination of clinical history, physical examination, and imaging. The most informative imaging study is an MRI, which shows the spinal canal, disc material, ligament thickening, and nerve root compression in detail. CT scanning is useful when MRI is contraindicated. X-rays show bony alignment and spondylolisthesis but do not show soft tissue stenosis.
It is important to remember that imaging findings must be interpreted in the context of clinical symptoms. Many people over 60 have MRI findings consistent with stenosis but have no or minimal symptoms. The goal of evaluation is to identify which findings are clinically relevant to the patient’s specific complaints.
Non-Surgical Treatment at Camarillo Functional Health
For most patients with lumbar spinal stenosis, a comprehensive non-surgical program produces significant improvement in pain, walking ability, and quality of life. At Camarillo Functional Health, Dr. Veselak builds individualized care plans that address multiple layers of the problem simultaneously:
Spinal Decompression Therapy
Computer-controlled lumbar decompression creates negative pressure within the disc space, drawing bulging material toward center and increasing circulation to compressed nerve tissue. It directly addresses the disc component of lumbar stenosis with a strong evidence base for pain relief and functional improvement.
Functional Neurology
Chronic lumbar stenosis creates compensatory movement patterns, muscle inhibition, and central sensitization — all of which maintain disability long after acute inflammation has settled. Functional neurological rehabilitation retrains the brain’s motor and sensory maps, reduces pain amplification, and restores coordinated movement patterns that protect the stenotic spine.
Functional Medicine and Anti-Inflammatory Protocols
Systemic inflammation significantly worsens lumbar stenosis outcomes. Through comprehensive lab evaluation, Dr. Veselak identifies underlying inflammatory drivers — metabolic, gut-related, hormonal, or nutritional — and builds a targeted protocol to reduce the inflammatory burden on spinal tissues.
Core and Hip Stabilization
Weakness in the deep stabilizing muscles of the lumbar spine and hips dramatically increases stress on stenotic segments. A carefully designed rehabilitation program — progressing from activation to endurance to functional strength — provides the muscular support that reduces nerve compression during daily activity.
Manual Therapy
Gentle mobilization of adjacent spinal segments, sacroiliac joints, and hip joints reduces the compensatory mechanical stress that accumulates around stenotic levels. Soft tissue work addresses the chronic muscle guarding that contributes to pain and limits movement.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if I have lumbar stenosis or a herniated disc?
Both can cause similar symptoms, including radiating leg pain. The key distinguishing feature of lumbar stenosis is the positional pattern — symptoms that worsen with walking and extension and improve with sitting and flexion. Herniated discs often cause more acute, sharp pain that worsens with sitting and forward bending. MRI can definitively distinguish the two, though many patients have both simultaneously.
Can lumbar stenosis cause permanent nerve damage?
If severe compression is left untreated for a long period, some degree of permanent nerve damage is possible. However, most patients who seek care before significant neurological deficit develops recover well. Indicators of urgency include rapidly progressive weakness, foot drop, or loss of bladder/bowel control.
Is it safe to exercise with lumbar spinal stenosis?
Yes — with appropriate guidance. Flexion-biased exercise (walking with a slight forward lean, cycling, swimming, yoga with a focus on lumbar flexion) is generally well tolerated. Avoiding prolonged standing, heavy lifting with a lordotic (arched) lower back, and extension-based activities reduces symptom provocation.
How does lumbar stenosis differ from cervical stenosis?
Lumbar stenosis primarily affects the legs and walking ability. Cervical stenosis (in the neck) involves the spinal cord itself and can cause symptoms throughout the body — weakness and numbness in the hands and arms, balance difficulties, and in severe cases, dysfunction below the level of compression. Cervical stenosis often requires more urgent evaluation.
Get Answers — and Real Relief
If you’re struggling with back pain, leg cramping when walking, or difficulty standing for any length of time, lumbar spinal stenosis may be the underlying cause. Dr. Veselak and the team at Camarillo Functional Health offer a thorough evaluation to understand your specific pattern of stenosis and develop a treatment plan designed to get you moving again — without surgery as the first resort.
We serve patients from Camarillo, Ventura, Oxnard, Thousand Oaks, Westlake Village, and throughout Ventura County. Contact us to schedule your comprehensive consultation.
Related: Spinal Stenosis Overview | Can Spinal Stenosis Be Reversed Without Surgery? | Neurogenic Claudication Explained
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