Pain relief without surgery

Most spine problems do not require surgery. The aim of non-surgical treatment is to reduce pain, resolve inflammation, and strengthen the muscles that support the spine — step by step, achieving the greatest possible benefit with the smallest possible intervention.

~90% of patients recover without surgery
Jump to When it helps Treatment methods CT-guided block SI joint block Infusion therapy Physiotherapy Patient journey What to expect FAQ

When non-surgical treatment is effective

Non-surgical treatment is the first and most important option for the vast majority of spine pain. The goal is not simply to silence pain, but to address its source directly and to restore the muscular system that moves the spine — so that symptoms resolve in a lasting way.

Non-surgical therapy is particularly effective in the following conditions:

  • Nerve root pain caused by a herniated disc — around 70% of cases resolve with non-surgical treatment, without surgery
  • Facet joint pain — degeneration (spondyloarthrosis) of the small joints connecting the vertebrae
  • Sacroiliac (SI) joint dysfunction — often after asymmetric loading, post-partum, or sports injury
  • Chronic low back and neck pain — myofascial and discogenic complaints
  • Acute low back pain — sudden, severe lower back pain
  • Mild to moderate spinal stenosis — as a first step, before considering surgical options

It is also valuable when surgery is not feasible (e.g. significant comorbidity, severe osteoporosis), or when the patient prefers to avoid the surgical route — within what is medically reasonable.

What is available

Treatment methods are always tailored to the nature and source of the symptoms — typically not a single technique, but a combination of these, applied sequentially or in parallel. A precise plan requires a spine surgical consultation and a recent MRI.

CT-guided nerve root block

Targeted delivery of local anaesthetic and anti-inflammatory steroid next to the affected nerve root, under CT or fluoroscopic guidance. Particularly effective for radiating pain caused by disc herniation or foraminal stenosis.

Details

CT-guided facet joint block

Targeted treatment of pain originating from the small joints between the vertebrae (facet joints). Typical indication: chronic, mechanical-type lower back pain that worsens with movement, in older patients.

Details

SI (sacroiliac) joint injection

Targeted injection therapy for sacroiliac joint dysfunction. Often missed diagnostically, even though SI joint pathology accounts for a substantial proportion of low back pain.

Details

Infusion therapy

An anti-inflammatory and pain-relieving infusion course, with a composition tailored to the source of pain. Delivered on an outpatient basis. Faster onset than oral medication.

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Physiotherapy

One-on-one, personalised movement therapy — far more effective than group programmes: the physiotherapist designs an individual treatment plan with muscle-relaxation and pain-relief exercises, and strengthens the deep stabilising muscles of the spine. Required in nearly every case for lasting results.

Details

Medication

Non-steroidal anti-inflammatories, muscle relaxants, agents acting on neuropathic pain — selected according to the character of the pain. Rarely sufficient on its own, but an important complement to the other modalities.

Precisely where the source of pain is

One of the most effective tools in non-surgical spine care is the CT-guided targeted block injection. Imaging guidance ensures that a minimal amount of medication is delivered exactly where the source of pain is, without unnecessarily burdening the rest of the body.

CT-guided nerve root block — axial CT image showing needle position
CT-guided nerve root block: the image clearly shows precise needle positioning next to the affected nerve root

Nerve root block

If the nerve emerging between the vertebrae is the source of pain — for example due to compression from a disc herniation or spinal stenosis — a targeted nerve root block is the appropriate intervention. During the procedure, a minimal amount of local anaesthetic and anti-inflammatory steroid is delivered next to the affected nerve root.

Needle placement is verified using CT or fluoroscopy, so that the treatment reaches only the inflamed nerve. The local anaesthetic may cause temporary numbness or weakness — this is a normal phenomenon that typically resolves within a few hours.

Facet joint block

Increased loading of the small joints between the vertebrae (facet joints) accelerates cartilage wear (arthrosis), which can produce mechanical-type low back pain that worsens with movement. In such cases, a small amount of local anaesthetic and anti-inflammatory steroid is delivered into the painful joint, again under CT or fluoroscopic guidance.

How the procedure works

  • Diagnosis confirmed by imaging (MRI) is required
  • Needle position is verified using CT or fluoroscopy
  • A 10–30 minute observation period is required after the procedure. A recovery bed is available if needed.
  • If symptoms have resolved, the patient can go home unaccompanied
  • Driving on the day of the procedure is not recommended

Contraindications · special caution

  • Hypersensitivity to any of the agents used
  • Anticoagulant (blood thinner) use requires coordination: with acetylsalicylic acid (e.g. Aspirin) the block can proceed; with clopidogrel a 7-day pause is recommended, with other anticoagulants a 2–5 day pause
  • Uncontrolled blood sugar or hypertension — the treating physician must be informed
  • Active infection at the treatment site or systemic infection

Sacroiliac joint dysfunction

The sacroiliac (SI) joint — the connection between the sacrum and the pelvis — is one of the most common, yet most frequently misdiagnosed, sources of low back pain. The pain is typically one-sided, felt in the upper buttock or around the greater trochanter of the femur, and is often aggravated by sitting, prolonged standing or asymmetric loading.

Typical contexts for its development: post-partum state, one-sided sport or occupational loading, leg-length discrepancy, prior injury, or altered biomechanics following spine surgery.

Diagnosis is clarified through a combination of targeted physical examination and imaging — in uncertain cases, the diagnostic SI block itself helps confirm the origin: if the pain disappears after the injection, the source is identified.

Treatment follows the same targeted block logic as elsewhere in the spine: under imaging guidance, local anaesthetic and anti-inflammatory steroid are delivered into the joint. This is often complemented by targeted physiotherapy that stabilises the muscles of the pelvic girdle.

Anti-inflammatory and pain-relief on an outpatient basis

An infusion course is an alternative to oral anti-inflammatory and pain-relief medication. Its advantages: faster, stronger effect, predictable dosing, and less burden on the gastrointestinal tract. Typical indications: an acute, severe episode of low back pain, or persistent symptoms that respond inadequately to oral medication.

The course is individualised — composition is determined by the nature of the pain, the patient's general health and any concomitant conditions. A combination of anti-inflammatory, muscle-relaxant and analgesic components is typical.

Infusion therapy is delivered on an outpatient basis at Budai Egészségközpont. Each session takes a few hours, over several consecutive days. The duration and frequency of the course are adjusted to the severity of the symptoms and the therapeutic response — typically as a multi-day cycle.

The key to lasting results

The vast majority of spine complaints involve a muscular imbalance — either as the primary cause, or as a contributing factor alongside disc, nerve root or joint pathology. For this reason, targeted physiotherapy is an essential element of nearly every non-surgical treatment plan: it strengthens the deep stabilising muscles of the spine and restores the natural balance of the musculoskeletal system.

Block injections, infusions or medication eliminate pain and inflammation — physiotherapy ensures the improvement lasts. A well-designed 2–3 month programme not only relieves the current symptoms but also helps prevent recurrence.

I work together with the physiotherapy team at Budai Egészségközpont. Part of the treatment plan is that, following the block or infusion course, the patient receives a personalised exercise programme whose key elements they must also perform at home.

How non-surgical treatment unfolds

Every patient journey is individual — but the main milestones follow a similar pattern. The steps below show what to expect from the first appointment to full recovery.

1

Consultation

Spine surgical outpatient appointment: detailed history, physical and neurological examination, review of any existing imaging. The aim is to identify the source of pain — at this stage, the likely diagnosis often already emerges.

2

Imaging · diagnostics

Further imaging if needed: MRI, CT, X-ray — depending on what is required for an accurate diagnosis. MRI is the primary tool for evaluating soft tissues (disc, nerves); CT and X-ray assess the bony structure.

3

Follow-up consultation · diagnosis

Based on the new findings, we discuss the precise diagnosis, the treatment alternatives and the expected course. We decide together on the main elements of the personalised treatment plan.

4

Therapy

Treatment is a combination of one or more modalities — medication, CT-guided block, outpatient infusion course, physiotherapy or a combination of these. The composition is case-dependent and can be refined as treatment progresses, in line with the response.

5

Follow-up

Evaluation of treatment effectiveness — typically 2–4 weeks after the course is completed. If needed: repetition, adjustment, or — if the non-surgical pathway has not produced sufficient improvement — a discussion of the surgical options.

Pricing

  • The fees for consultation and non-surgical treatment methods are listed in the current Budai Egészségközpont price list.
  • Consultations, imaging examinations, blocks, infusions and physiotherapy sessions are billed separately — based on the actual treatment plan.
  • Detailed costs can be clarified at the consultation, once the treatment plan is known. Current price list available at: bhc.hu/arlista
Patient case · composite

"The pain was already radiating into my leg" — a disc herniation story

A 40-year-old patient working in an office presented with disc herniation causing pain radiating into the left leg. After medication and a targeted CT-guided injection, followed by physiotherapy, the patient gradually returned to normal life — without surgery.

Read full case

Realistic expectations

Non-surgical treatment can be highly effective — but it is worth knowing in advance what it does and does not deliver. The table below helps anchor expectations in reality.

What you can expect

  • Significant pain reduction in most cases
  • Improved mobility and sleep quality
  • Return to work and everyday activities
  • Avoidance of surgery in around 90% of patients
  • Lasting results — provided physiotherapy is performed regularly
  • Repeatability — if symptoms return, treatment can be repeated

What it does NOT provide

  • Immediate, next-day pain relief — full effect develops over 1–4 weeks
  • Disappearance of the lesion seen on MRI — the goal is symptom relief, not changing the imaging
  • A lifetime guarantee — degenerative processes continue, and new symptoms can arise at any time
  • An exemption from physiotherapy — lasting results require the patient's active participation
  • A solution for severe conditions where immediate surgery is required (paralysis, cauda equina syndrome)

When surgery comes into play

Non-surgical treatment is often sufficient — but in some situations, the surgical solution is the fastest and most effective route:

  • Immediate surgery: established limb paralysis, cauda equina syndrome (loss of bladder or bowel control), severe and rapidly worsening neurological signs
  • Planned surgery: symptoms that fail to improve after 6–12 weeks of consistent non-surgical treatment and significantly impair work and quality of life
  • Morphological indication: significant instability, vertebral slippage, severe spinal stenosis — where lasting improvement is unlikely without addressing the underlying bony structure

If your situation falls into one of these categories, you can also request a separate second-opinion consultation — an independent professional perspective can help make the decision more confident.

What patients most often ask

Does the CT-guided injection hurt?

After the skin is disinfected, you will feel a single needle prick; during the procedure itself there is only mild pressure. As the needle approaches the nerve, you may feel a brief radiating sensation in the leg. Most patients do not describe significant pain. Immediately after the procedure, the local anaesthetic may cause temporary numbness or weakness in the treated area — this resolves completely within a few hours.

How quickly will I feel the effect of the block?

The local anaesthetic takes effect within hours; the anti-inflammatory steroid develops its effect over 2–7 days and can last for weeks to months. If the response is partial or short-lived, the treatment can be repeated.

How many block sessions will I need?

In most cases a single block produces significant improvement. If the response is partial, the treatment can be repeated after 2–3 weeks. Long-term repeated blocks over many months are not recommended — if symptoms remain that persistent, the treatment strategy needs to be reconsidered.

Can I go home alone after the treatment?

A 10–30 minute observation period is required after the procedure. If you have no symptoms, you can go home unaccompanied. Driving on the day of the treatment is not recommended due to the temporary numbness or weakness.

What imaging is needed before the treatment?

A recent MRI (no older than 3 months) is essential. Targeted treatment cannot be planned without diagnostic imaging. During the consultation I review the findings and we decide whether further imaging is needed.

Can I take painkillers during the treatment?

All medications taken during the treatment are reviewed at the consultation. Anti-inflammatories and standard painkillers can usually be continued. With anticoagulants (blood thinners), modification or a pause may be needed in the days before the block — this is always discussed in advance.

When can I return to work?

After most non-surgical procedures, return to office work is possible the next day. For physical work, the timing is agreed individually — typically a few days of rest. For sport, 1–2 weeks is recommended.

What if the treatment does not bring improvement?

At a follow-up consultation we discuss the next steps. These may include: trying a different modality (e.g. an infusion course instead of a block), repeating the treatment with different parameters, or — if the non-surgical pathway has been exhausted — considering the surgical alternatives. The treatment journey is never definitively closed; there is always a logical next step.

Dr. Zsolt Szövérfi
Written and medically reviewed by Dr. Zsolt Szövérfi PhD Spine Surgeon · Orthopaedic and Trauma Specialist · Full profile Last updated: April 2026

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