When the pain stays above the knee, it might feel like sciatica, Smith said, but it usually isn’t.
How to find relief
There’s no easy fix for sciatic pain, and the best healer is time. What eases one person’s pain might not work for the next. Whereas muscles, tendons or ligaments respond well to rehabilitative exercises, the evidence for physical therapy’s effectiveness on sciatica is mixed.
Still, it’s important to find ways to move.
“The worst thing you can do is to keep limiting your life and activity,” says Tom Jesson, a Houston-based physical therapist and author of Understanding Sciatica. “If you can tolerate the pain, keep moving as much as possible.”
Most experts agree that gentle exercise, like walking and swimming, is the best place to start.
Swimming is a good option when recovering from sciatica.Credit: Getty Images
“This will get blood flowing around the tissues and the nerve pathway,” says Benton, who also recommends gentle massage or manual therapy.
Avoid stretching your back in the early stages, especially bending forward. It might seem like a logical way to get relief, but it can aggravate the nerve even more. Likewise, says Benton, don’t massage the space around the nerve in your back with a tennis ball or similar object, and don’t twist through the lower back while carrying weight.
There are a few targeted exercises that can help once the pain has calmed down, usually after the first couple of weeks.
Pain-relieving exercises
Doing a prone press-up, which is a gentle version of a cobra pose, can ease nerve pain. Lie face down on the floor with your palms on the floor parallel to your chest. Gently press up, lifting your upper body off the floor but keeping your hands and hips on the floor. Hold for a couple of seconds, then release back to the floor. Repeat this 10 times.
Nerve flossing
Another option is nerve flossing, which gently slides the nerve within its sheath and can help alleviate short-term pain.
There are several flossing techniques for sciatic pain. These are not muscle stretches, so be gentle and focus on ease of movement. One common variation: Lie on the floor with your knees bent, feet on the floor. Place both hands behind the knee on the affected leg and pull it towards your chest, with your chin tucked. Hold for about five seconds and then slowly lower the foot back to the starting position. Try once or twice a day for 10 to 20 repetitions, but stop immediately if pain increases.
Moving forward
Exercises and physical therapy can help sciatica, but repair still takes time. “When you compare healing time to something like a calf strain, you’re in for a much longer process,” says Smith.
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Most people will begin to feel some pain relief after the first two to four weeks, Jesson says, and more in the first three months. For some, sciatic pain can linger a year or more. Progress often isn’t linear, and you should expect occasional flare-ups.
In Smith’s case, that initial pop was a herniated disc. The most severe pain lasted for only a few weeks, but it was three full years before he returned to his regular strength training.
While there’s no foolproof method for preventing sciatic pain, core stability exercises may help, as does keeping your cardiovascular system healthy. Benton recommends her patients work with a physical therapist or trainer to check their form on major movement patterns, like squats, deadlifts, pull=ups and pushups.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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