What Is Lumbar Spondylosis (Low-Back 'Calcification')?
Lumbar spondylosis is the general name for the age-related degenerative changes of the lumbar spine. Several structures are affected in this process: the water content of the discs decreases, their height drops and they lose some of their flexibility; the facet joints at the back of the vertebrae develop calcification and enlargement; bony spurs (osteophytes) form at the edges of the vertebrae and the ligaments supporting the spine can thicken. What is popularly called 'calcification' is in fact this multi-component picture of wear. These changes are not in themselves a 'disease' but a natural ageing process the spine undergoes over the years; like the greying of hair, they are largely inevitable. What really matters is whether this wear has reached a point that compresses the nerves (stenosis) or makes the spine unstable (instability) — because the treatment decision is made accordingly.
Symptoms: Does Wear Always Mean Pain?
The most important fact about lumbar spondylosis is this: many people with advanced calcification on imaging have no complaints at all, while some people with mild changes can have significant pain. In other words, the degree of wear on a spinal MRI is not always proportional to the pain the patient feels. In patients who do have symptoms, the most common complaint is stiffness and dull low-back pain that becomes pronounced in the mornings and after inactivity and changes with movement during the day. If the degeneration progresses and narrows the spinal canal (lumbar spinal stenosis), pain, heaviness and numbness in the legs can appear when walking; these complaints ease on sitting and bending forwards. When the facet joints predominate, mechanical low-back pain appears; if disc degeneration affects a nerve root, pain radiating to the leg can be seen. Understanding which structure is responsible, and to what extent, is the key to the right treatment.
Diagnosis and a Conservative Approach in Most Patients
The diagnosis rests on interpreting the patient's complaints and examination findings together with imaging; plain X-ray and MRI show the degenerative changes and any stenosis or instability. However, 'advanced spondylosis' written on imaging does not by itself mean surgery is needed. The vast majority of patients with lumbar spondylosis are successfully managed without surgery, conservatively. The cornerstones of this approach are: regular exercise and physiotherapy that strengthen the trunk and back muscles, weight control, posture and daily-activity adjustments, and appropriate medication support during painful periods. When a specific source of the pain is clarified (for example the facet joints or nerve-root irritation), targeted injections or interventional methods such as radiofrequency can come into play. The aim is to manage the pain and preserve mobility while avoiding unnecessary surgery.
When Does Surgery Come onto the Agenda?
Lumbar spondylosis itself — that is, simply having 'calcification' — is not a reason for surgery. Surgery is considered when specific structural problems develop on this degenerative background and do not respond to conservative treatment. The main situations that put surgery on the agenda are: leg complaints that limit walking distance and seriously impair quality of life due to marked narrowing of the spinal canal (lumbar spinal stenosis); instability such as one vertebra slipping over another (spondylolisthesis); and weakness due to resistant, progressive nerve-root compression. In these situations, surgical options such as decompression (relieving the pressure on the nerve) and, where needed, stabilisation-fusion are discussed. Pictures requiring emergency surgery (for example progressive severe neurological loss or cauda equina signs) are handled separately and as a priority.
Realistic Expectations and an Honest Assessment
The most important message in low-back 'calcification' is this: in most people it is a natural process that comes with age and requires correct management, not panic. Because the degenerative changes are 'irreversible', the aim is not to 'restore the spine to its former state' but to control the pain and preserve function and mobility. Exercise and conservative treatment markedly reduce complaints in many patients, although the process can fluctuate from time to time. In selected cases that need surgery — especially in leg complaints due to stenosis — decompression can give a good result, but no surgery is guaranteed and outcomes vary according to the person, the duration of compression and the general condition. Our approach is individual for each patient: to avoid unnecessary surgery and, when it is genuinely needed, to recommend the most appropriate method with clear expectations.