Pinched Nerve
Pinched Nerve Treatment from a Board-Certified Spine Neurosurgeon in Bergen County, New Jersey.
A pinched nerve is exactly what it sounds like. A nerve in your spine is being compressed by something it should not be, and that compression is producing pain, numbness, tingling, or weakness in areas of your body that seem far removed from where the actual problem is.
The reason the symptoms travel so far from the source is that spinal nerves do not stay in the spine. They exit through openings between the vertebrae and travel into the arms, hands, legs, and feet, carrying signals in both directions between the brain and the body. When a nerve root is compressed at the point where it exits the spine, those signals get disrupted. Pain, tingling, and numbness travel down the nerve pathway. Weakness develops in the muscles the nerve controls. And the symptoms appear wherever that nerve happens to go, which is often surprisingly far from the neck or back where the compression actually exists.
A pinched nerve in the neck, called cervical radiculopathy, most often causes symptoms in the shoulder, arm, and hand. A pinched nerve in the lower back, called lumbar radiculopathy, most often causes symptoms in the buttock, leg, and foot. This is why so many patients spend months treating arm or leg symptoms before anyone looks at the spine as the source.
At Spine Care New Jersey, Rishi N. Sheth, MD, approaches every pinched nerve case by identifying and treating the underlying cause of the compression, not just managing its downstream symptoms.
SymptomsWhat a Pinched Nerve Actually Feels Like — and What It Means.
Patients describe pinched nerve pain in many different ways. Some say it feels like an electric shock that shoots down the arm or leg with certain movements. Others describe a constant burning or aching that never fully goes away. Some notice numbness or tingling that comes and goes throughout the day. Others wake up at night with shooting pain that makes it impossible to stay comfortable in any position.
The specific symptoms depend on which nerve is compressed and how severely. Here is what to pay attention to.
Pain that travels from the neck into the shoulder, arm, forearm, or specific fingers is a classic presentation of a pinched nerve in the cervical spine. The pain is often sharp or burning in character and may be accompanied by numbness or tingling in a particular pattern in the hand.
Pain that travels from the lower back pain through the buttocks and into the leg, calf, or foot is the pattern associated with a pinched nerve in the lumbar spine. When it follows the sciatic nerve, this is called sciatica. The leg pain is often significantly worse than the back pain itself, which sometimes leads patients to focus entirely on the leg and miss the spinal source.
Weakness in specific muscle groups is a more serious sign. Difficulty lifting the arm, weakness in the grip, foot drop, or difficulty walking on the heels or toes all indicate that the nerve compression is affecting motor function, not just pain transmission. This level of neurological involvement warrants prompt evaluation.
When both arms or both legs are involved simultaneously, or when there are any changes in bladder or bowel function, the situation may be more urgent and requires immediate medical attention.
CausesWhat Causes Nerve Compression in the Neck and Lower Back.
Most pinched nerves in the spine are caused by one of a handful of structural problems. Identifying the specific cause is what determines how the condition should be treated.
Herniated Disc
A herniated or slipped disc is the most common cause of a pinched nerve, particularly in younger and middle-aged adults. When the soft inner material of a spinal disc pushes through its outer wall, it can compress a nearby nerve root directly. In the cervical spine, this causes arm pain and hand numbness. In the lumbar spine, it causes leg pain and sciatica.
Bone Spurs and Osteophytes
As the spine degenerates over time, the body produces extra bone at the edges of the vertebrae and along the facet joints. These bone spurs, called osteophytes, can encroach on the foraminal openings through which nerve roots exit the spine, producing a gradual, progressive nerve compression that often develops so slowly patients adapt to it before realizing how much function they have lost.
Foraminal Stenosis
The foramina are the channels on each side of the spine through which nerve roots pass as they exit toward the arms and legs. When these channels narrow due to disc height loss, bone spur formation, or facet joint enlargement, the nerve root running through them can become chronically compressed. This is called foraminal stenosis and is a common cause of persistent, position-dependent nerve pain.
Spinal Stenosis
Central spinal stenosis involves narrowing of the main spinal canal. When severe, it can compress multiple nerve roots simultaneously, causing bilateral symptoms and, in the cervical spine, compression of the spinal cord itself.
Spondylolisthesis
When one vertebra slips forward over the one below it, the resulting misalignment can stretch or compress the nerve roots exiting at that level. The instability associated with spondylolisthesis often makes the nerve pain worse with activity and movement.
TreatmentsMost Pinched Nerves Respond Well to the Right Non-Surgical Treatment.
The encouraging reality about pinched nerves is that most cases, even those with significant arm or leg pain, improve with well-chosen non-surgical treatment. The key is targeting the actual cause of the nerve compression rather than simply masking the pain.
Non-Surgical Treatment
Physical Therapy
Physical therapy for a pinched nerve is most effective when it is prescribed after a proper diagnosis because the exercises that help depend entirely on what is causing the compression. A program addressing a herniated disc causing cervical radiculopathy is quite different from one designed for foraminal stenosis causing lumbar nerve pain. The goal in either case is to reduce the mechanical forces on the affected nerve root, strengthen the surrounding musculature, improve posture and spinal alignment, and give the nerve the environment it needs to recover.
Epidural Steroid Injections
Epidural steroid injections are one of the most effective tools available for a pinched nerve causing significant pain. Delivering anti-inflammatory medication directly around the compressed nerve root reduces the swelling and inflammation that are amplifying the pain signal. For many patients, a well-timed injection provides enough relief to allow meaningful participation in physical therapy and often avoids the need for surgery altogether.
Transforaminal Injections
Transforaminal injections are a more targeted version of this approach, placing medication at the precise level of the compressed nerve root. For patients with single-level nerve compression in a clearly defined distribution, this level of targeting can be especially effective.
Conservative pain management
Conservative pain management with anti-inflammatory medications and nerve pain medications such as gabapentin can help manage symptoms in the short term while other treatments take effect. These are supportive measures rather than definitive treatments, but they play an important role in keeping patients functional during recovery.
Surgical Treatments
Surgery for a pinched nerve is appropriate when non-surgical treatment has not produced adequate relief, when neurological symptoms such as weakness or loss of sensation are progressing, or when imaging shows a degree of nerve compression that is unlikely to improve without structural correction.
Microdiscectomy
Microdiscectomy is the most effective surgical treatment for a pinched nerve caused by a lumbar herniated disc. By removing the disc fragment pressing on the nerve root through a minimally invasive approach, relief from radiating leg pain is often immediate. Most patients go home the same day and return to light activity within one to two weeks.
ACDF
For cervical pinched nerves, ACDF removes the offending disc through a small incision in the front of the neck and fuses the adjacent vertebrae to stabilize the spine. Cervical disc replacement with ProDisc-C is an alternative for appropriate patients that preserves natural neck movement rather than fusing the segment.
Foraminotomy
Foraminotomy is a targeted decompression procedure that widens the foramen directly, relieving pressure on the nerve root without removing the disc or performing a fusion. It is particularly appropriate for pinched nerves caused by foraminal stenosis with bone spurs rather than disc herniation.
All procedures at Spine Care New Jersey are performed using minimally invasive techniques with Mazor robotic assistance when appropriate.
Getting to the Real Cause of Your Nerve Pain — the First Time.
One of the most frustrating experiences for pinched nerve patients is being treated for the wrong thing. Arm or shoulder pain that gets months of physical therapy aimed at the shoulder, when the actual problem is a compressed nerve root in the cervical spine. Leg pain that gets treated as a hamstring or hip issue, when the nerve is being compressed in the lumbar spine.
Rishi N. Sheth, MD is trained to read the clinical pattern of nerve compression accurately. The specific distribution of pain, the pattern of numbness, the reflex changes on examination, and the MRI findings together tell a clear story about which nerve is involved, at which level, and why. Getting that story right from the beginning is what makes the difference between a treatment plan that works and months of ineffective care.
As a fellowship-trained spine neurosurgeon at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Rishi N. Sheth, MD has evaluated and treated pinched nerves at every level of complexity, from straightforward single-level herniations to multi-level compression in patients with significant prior surgical history. For patients in Bergen County who are tired of being managed rather than treated, Spine Care New Jersey offers the kind of thorough, specific, expert evaluation that pinched nerve patients deserve.
Wondering whether your arm pain or leg pain is coming from a pinched nerve in your spine?
Submit your MRI for a free review by Rishi N. Sheth, MD and get a clear answer.
Common Questions About Pinched Nerve Treatment at Spine Care New Jersey.
A pinched nerve occurs when surrounding tissues press on a nerve, causing irritation. Common pinched nerve symptoms include sharp pain, tingling, numbness, and muscle weakness that may spread to nearby areas.
Pinched nerve in the neck symptoms often include neck pain, stiffness, numbness in the arms or hands, tingling in the fingers, and pain that radiates from the neck down the shoulder or arm.
A pinched nerve in the back is commonly caused by herniated discs, spinal degeneration, poor posture, or injuries that put pressure on spinal nerves and lead to discomfort.
There is no single instant pinched nerve cure, but effective treatment includes rest, physical therapy, posture correction, and medical care to relieve pressure on the nerve and reduce symptoms.
Yes, many mild cases of pinched nerves heal on their own with proper rest and avoiding activities that worsen the condition, although some cases may require treatment.
How long a pinched nerve takes to heal depends on severity, but most cases improve within a few days to several weeks, while more serious conditions may take longer.
Does a pinched nerve cause dizziness? In some cases, especially with neck involvement, nerve compression can contribute to dizziness or balance issues.
Pinched nerve treatment for the lower back may include physical therapy, stretching, medications, posture improvement, and, in severe cases, injections or minimally invasive procedures.


