What Is Lumbar Canal Narrowing and Why Does It Happen?
In lumbar spinal stenosis the central canal, lateral recess or foramen narrow so that there is insufficient room for the nerve structures passing through. The narrowing arises from age-related degenerative changes such as loss of disc height, facet-joint enlargement (hypertrophy), thickening of the yellow ligament (ligamentum flavum) and bony spurs (osteophytes). Less often a congenitally narrow canal, a slipped vertebra (spondylolisthesis) or changes from previous surgery play a role. Stenosis may be at a single level or multilevel; advanced age is the main risk factor.
The Typical Symptom: Neurogenic Claudication
The characteristic finding of canal narrowing is neurogenic claudication: leg pain, numbness and weakness that appear with walking or standing and ease on bending forward or sitting. Patients often describe relief when leaning on a shopping cart (a forward-stooped posture) or walking uphill, because bending forward slightly widens the canal. This picture must be distinguished from vascular claudication due to leg-artery disease. Advanced cases may show balance problems and rarely bladder complaints; back pain may accompany but is not always dominant.
When Non-Surgical, When Surgery?
Initial treatment is conservative and keeps many patients stable: regular exercise and physiotherapy (especially forward-flexion and core-strengthening programmes), weight management, pain management and, in selected cases, epidural steroid injections. Surgery is considered for marked and progressing walking limitation, leg pain unresponsive to conservative care that seriously impairs quality of life, progressive muscle weakness or, rarely, bladder-bowel problems. The basis of surgery is widening the canal by removing the tissue compressing the nerves (decompression — laminectomy/laminotomy). If marked instability or a slipped vertebra accompanies the narrowing, fusion (stabilization) may be added to decompression; minimally invasive methods are used in suitable cases.
Surgery, Recovery and the Treatment Journey
MRI is the most valuable method for the decision; it best shows the canal narrowing and nerve compression, and CT complements it for bony narrowing and previous surgery when needed. This imaging can be shared and reviewed remotely before you travel. In cases with decompression alone the patient is usually mobilized early and the hospital stay is short; the process is longer if fusion is added. For patients who travel, a check before a long flight and a period of close follow-up after discharge are recommended, and the timing of the return is planned carefully especially when fusion is added. Return to office work is possible within a few weeks for most patients, while this period can extend in fusion cases and physical jobs. After you return home you are given the operative report and images for follow-up.
Risks and Realistic Expectations
Every surgery carries risk: bleeding, infection, temporary symptoms from nerve-root irritation, dural tear, and in fusion cases non-union or, over time, new narrowing at the neighbouring level (adjacent segment disease). These rates vary with age, extent of narrowing and accompanying illnesses. As for results, the honest picture is this: leg pain that worsens with walking and the walking distance improve markedly in appropriately selected patients; but because the disease develops on a degenerative background, long-term follow-up is important and accompanying back pain may not disappear completely. We do not promise a guaranteed outcome; expectations are shared openly before surgery.