Lumbar Epidural Steroid Injection
A lumbar epidural steroid injection (ESI) is a non-surgical treatment used to reduce inflammation around irritated spinal nerves. It is commonly recommended for sciatica, lumbar disc herniations, and spinal stenosis causing leg pain, numbness, or tingling.
Common Reasons Patients Need an Injection
- Sciatica (radiating leg pain)
- Lumbar disc herniation
- Lumbar spinal stenosis
- Nerve inflammation after spine surgery
Procedure Highlights
- Outpatient procedure
- Imaging-guided precision
- Minimal downtime
- Supports rehab and recovery
What Is a Lumbar Epidural Steroid Injection?
A lumbar epidural steroid injection delivers anti-inflammatory medication into the epidural space surrounding spinal nerves. The goal is to decrease inflammation, reduce nerve irritation, and improve your ability to move and participate in physical therapy.
Conditions Treated
Lumbar Disc Herniation
Disc material can press on nerves causing radiating pain, numbness, or tingling.
Learn MoreLumbar Spinal Stenosis
Narrowing of the spinal canal can inflame nerves and reduce walking tolerance.
Learn MoreTypes of Lumbar Epidural Injections
Transforaminal ESI
- Targets a specific nerve root
- Often used for disc herniation
- Highly precise medication delivery
Interlaminar ESI
- Medication spreads across multiple levels
- Common for central stenosis
- Addresses broader nerve irritation
Caudal ESI
- Access through lower epidural space
- Often used after prior surgery
- Alternative when other approaches are limited
Who Is a Candidate?
Good Candidates Typically Have
- Radiating leg pain or nerve symptoms
- Symptoms that match imaging findings
- Pain limiting activity or therapy progress
- Desire to delay or avoid surgery when appropriate
May Not Be Ideal If
- Pain is purely muscular or mechanical
- Active infection is present
- Blood thinners cannot be safely managed
- Allergy to medication components
What Happens During the Procedure?
Before
- Medication review
- Imaging confirmation
- Sterile preparation
During
- Local anesthetic applied
- Imaging-guided needle placement
- Steroid medication injected
After
- Short monitoring period
- Same-day discharge
- Post-procedure care instructions
Expected Results
Relief Timeline
- Immediate temporary relief or numbness may occur
- 2–7 days: steroid effect typically begins
- 1–3 weeks: peak improvement for many patients
Duration of Relief
- Varies by diagnosis
- May last weeks to months
- Best results when combined with therapy
Risks and Side Effects
Common
- Injection site soreness
- Temporary pain flare
- Temporary numbness or heaviness
Steroid Effects
- Temporary blood sugar increase
- Facial flushing
- Short-term sleep disruption
Rare
- Infection
- Bleeding
- Nerve injury
- Allergic reaction
Aftercare and Recovery
First 24 Hours
- Limit strenuous activity
- Follow discharge instructions
- Monitor symptom changes
Next Few Days
- Resume walking and light activity
- Begin or continue therapy as directed
- Track improvement
When to Call
- Severe symptom worsening
- Signs of infection
- New neurological symptoms
Schedule a Consultation
If you’re dealing with persistent leg pain, numbness, or symptoms that aren’t improving, we can review your history and imaging and determine whether a lumbar ESI makes sense.
Request an Appointment
Use our request form and our team will follow up with next steps.
Request AppointmentCall the Office
Prefer to schedule by phone? Call us and we’ll help you choose the right next step.
Call 888-978-0985Related Conditions and Treatments
Failed Back Surgery Syndrome
Persistent post-surgical nerve pain may benefit from injections.
Learn MoreMinimally Invasive Spine Surgery
Advanced techniques that reduce tissue disruption (when appropriate).
Learn MoreFAQ
How painful is the injection?
Most patients tolerate the procedure well. Local anesthetic is used and the procedure is brief. Soreness afterward is common and usually temporary.
How many injections can I have?
This varies based on diagnosis and response. Your provider will recommend a safe treatment plan based on your situation.
Can injections prevent surgery?
In many cases injections help control symptoms and delay or avoid surgery, especially when combined with physical therapy and a movement plan.
How long does it take to work?
Some people feel temporary relief the same day from the anesthetic. The steroid effect typically starts within 2–7 days.