Narrowing of the spinal canal can put pressure on the nerves and spinal cord. The process develops slowly, and the treatment is also stepwise: in mild to moderate cases, non-surgical therapy can achieve lasting improvement; in more severe or persistent cases, decompression surgery is the answer.
The spinal canal is the bony-ligamentous channel through which the spinal cord and nerve roots travel. Wear of the discs and the resulting abnormal hypermobility (instability) can lead to overgrowth and hypertrophy of the connecting tissues — disc, ligaments, bone — narrowing the spinal canal or the exit foramina of the nerve roots.
Stenosis develops slowly, typically over years to decades, and can occur in both the cervical and lumbar spine — with different symptoms and a different treatment logic.
In mild and moderate spinal stenosis, treatment almost always starts non-surgically. Targeted CT-guided injection therapy, physiotherapy and conscious modulation of physical load often produce lasting improvement — particularly when the foraminal exits are narrowed rather than the central canal.
In mild and moderate stenosis, targeted injection therapy and a properly designed physiotherapy programme are often enough. Details of non-surgical treatment are available on the dedicated page.
More on non-surgical treatmentLumbar stenosis has a characteristic clinical presentation: pain radiating into the leg, numbness and weakness develop while walking, after a shorter or longer distance. This is neurogenic claudication — a recognisable and well-treatable symptom complex.
Leg pain worsens with load — typically while walking — and eases within a short time on stopping or leaning slightly forward (for example, leaning on a shopping trolley). This symptom is often the most telltale sign of untreated stenosis.
Because the process develops slowly, urgent surgical indication rarely arises — there is time for gradual, targeted treatment.
A 3–4 cm midline skin incision is made on the back of the lumbar spine; the muscles are retracted and the spine is exposed. A bony window (laminotomy) is opened on the posterior aspect of the spine, through which the nerve roots and the dural sac are decompressed — "recalibrating" the canal for the nerves.
If instability accompanies the stenosis, segmental stabilization (fusion surgery) may also be needed. The decision is always made individually, based on MRI and dynamic X-ray.
Cervical stenosis can have more serious consequences than the lumbar form, because direct compression of the spinal cord can occur here. The range of symptoms is broader: gait disturbance, loss of hand dexterity, balance problems, and in more severe cases limb weakness — collectively known as myelopathy.
Through a 3–4 cm skin incision in the front of the neck, the spine is exposed, the disc is removed and the neural elements are decompressed. A cage with bone-graft substitute is placed in the position of the disc, providing stability and allowing the vertebrae to fuse. The procedure can be performed on up to four adjacent segments.
For multi-level stenosis or particular morphological features, the procedure is performed via a posterior approach. Through a midline incision on the back of the neck, the spine is exposed and a central laminectomy decompresses the spinal cord and nerve roots. If needed, the segments are stabilized with titanium screws and rods, secured with bone-graft substitute to ensure lasting fusion.
Treatment of spinal stenosis depends on the severity of the condition. The composite cases below illustrate both logics: the non-surgical path, where targeted injection and physiotherapy are sufficient, and the surgical solution, where these do not bring improvement.
A woman in her 70s with adult scoliosis and foraminal stenosis. After a series of CT-guided injections and targeted physiotherapy, she became lastingly symptom-free — without surgery.
Read full caseA 68-year-old, previously active man with significant neurogenic claudication. Non-surgical treatment did not bring improvement — after decompression surgery, he regained his ability to walk.
Read full caseWhether you have suspected spinal stenosis or a confirmed diagnosis and want to learn about the treatment options, the first step is a spine surgical consultation.
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