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Sacroiliac Joint Pain (Information and Second Opinion for International Patients)

Sacroiliac (SI) joint dysfunction is a common but often missed cause of pain felt in the lower back, hip and sometimes the upper part of the leg. The sacroiliac joint is a strong, barely-moving joint between the bone at the base of the spine (the sacrum) and the pelvic bone (the ilium). When this joint is irritated, the resulting pain is often confused with a disc herniation or facet joint pain — which is why a careful differential assessment is essential for the correct diagnosis. This page is especially valuable for patients abroad who have been treated for years for a 'disc herniation' without relief: before going to an unnecessary spine operation, you can share your imaging via our multilingual WhatsApp line for an independent remote second opinion. The good news: SI-joint pain does not require surgery in most patients, and treatment (physiotherapy, injections) can usually be continued in your home country. Below we explain the condition in plain terms.

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What Is the Sacroiliac Joint, and Why Does It Hurt?

The sacroiliac joint lies between the sacrum (the triangular bone above the tailbone, the lowest part of the spine) and the ilium bones on either side of the pelvis; there is one on each side of the body. This joint is supported by very strong ligaments and normally moves very little; its main task is to safely transmit the load of the upper body to the legs while standing and walking. Sacroiliac joint pain arises from excessive or insufficient movement, irritation or inflammation of this joint. Triggers include a fall or trauma, repetitive strain, ligament laxity during pregnancy and after childbirth, a leg-length difference, mechanical changes after hip-spine surgery and some inflammatory rheumatic diseases. The key concept is this: this is not a condition that compresses the spinal nerves, but a mechanical/inflammatory pain arising from the joint itself.

Symptoms and Why It Is Often Confused

Sacroiliac joint pain is typically felt in the lower-side of the back, in the hip-tailbone region and sometimes in the groin; the patient often describes the pain by pointing 'right here' over the joint. The pain can increase with prolonged sitting, rising to stand, climbing stairs, loading one leg and lying on the affected side. It can sometimes radiate from the hip to the back of the thigh, but sciatic-type pain running below the knee, reaching the toes, with marked numbness or weakness — as in a disc herniation — is generally not expected. The reason this picture is often confused is that the symptoms largely overlap with disc herniation, facet joint syndrome and hip-joint problems. So in some patients followed for years as having 'a disc herniation', the true source can be the sacroiliac joint.

Diagnosis: Differential Assessment and a Joint Block

The diagnosis of sacroiliac joint pain does not rest on a single test; it is a careful process of differential diagnosis. The first step is a detailed examination aimed at excluding whether the pain comes from the disc, facet or hip joint. On examination, several provocation (stress) tests of the SI joint being positive together supports the diagnosis. Imaging (MRI, and CT or X-ray where needed) both shows inflammatory/degenerative changes in the joint and helps exclude another cause of pain; however, imaging findings alone do not prove that the pain comes from that joint. The most valuable confirmation method is an image-guided diagnostic sacroiliac joint block: after a local anaesthetic is delivered into the joint, a marked temporary reduction in pain strongly supports the SI joint as the true source.

Treatment: Injections and Physiotherapy First, Fusion Rare

Treatment of sacroiliac joint pain is stepwise and largely non-surgical. The first step is a conservative approach: pain/anti-inflammatory medication, activity modification, correction of a leg-length difference where present and, especially, targeted physiotherapy-exercise programmes that balance the pelvis-hip-trunk muscles; in some patients a supportive SI belt can help. When these are insufficient, an image-guided sacroiliac joint injection (steroid + local anaesthetic) both reduces pain and confirms the diagnosis. In recurrent pain, interventional methods such as radiofrequency directed at the nerve branches supplying the joint can be considered. Surgery (sacroiliac fusion) is a rare option that comes onto the agenda only when all conservative and interventional options have been exhausted, in selected and resistant cases whose diagnosis has been clearly confirmed by blocks.

Realistic Expectations and an Honest Assessment

The honest picture in sacroiliac joint pain is this: when the diagnosis is correct, most patients experience marked relief with conservative and interventional methods, without surgery. However, when there is an underlying mechanical/degenerative basis, it can be a condition that recurs from time to time; the duration of effect of injections varies from person to person and can be repeated when needed. No method is a guaranteed permanent solution; the aim is to control the pain, preserve function and avoid unnecessary intervention. The most critical point is the correct diagnosis: clarifying that the pain truly comes from the sacroiliac joint both prevents pointless back operations and directs treatment to the right target. Our approach is individual for each patient: to provide the most benefit with the least intervention.

Часто задаваемые вопросы

I was treated for a disc herniation but it didn't help — could it be sacroiliac?

Yes, it is possible. Because the symptoms of sacroiliac joint pain largely overlap with disc herniation and facet pain, it is often confused; in some patients followed for years with a 'disc herniation' diagnosis, the true source can actually be the sacroiliac joint. For persistent low-back and hip pain, a differential assessment and, where needed, a diagnostic joint block help clarify the true source.

Does sacroiliac joint pain need surgery?

In most patients, no. Most treatment is delivered through physiotherapy-exercise, medication adjustment and image-guided injections; interventions such as radiofrequency are considered where needed. Surgery (sacroiliac fusion) is a rare option that comes onto the agenda only in resistant cases where all conservative and interventional options have been exhausted and whose diagnosis has been confirmed by blocks.

How is the diagnosis confirmed?

Not by a single test. First an examination is done to exclude whether the pain comes from the disc, facet or hip; several SI-joint provocation tests being positive together supports the diagnosis. Imaging helps exclude other causes. The most valuable confirmation is a marked reduction in pain during an image-guided diagnostic joint block.

I'm in another country — how do I apply for a second opinion?

You can share your current MRI images and complaints via our multilingual WhatsApp line; after a remote assessment or an independent second opinion, an online video consultation can be arranged. Treatment of sacroiliac pain (physiotherapy, injections) can usually be continued in your home country, so travel is not needed for most patients.

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