The VerdictHIGH CONVICTIONVerdict Score 84

Sciatica gets better with the right exercises — rest makes it worse.

Summary: Sciatica is when a nerve in your lower back gets pinched or irritated, sending pain shooting down your leg. Most people think rest is the answer, but lying in bed actually makes it worse. The right specific exercises can take pressure off the nerve and get you moving again within weeks — an

  1. Here's what's really happening: A bulging disc is pressing on or irritating your sciatic nerve — but 60-80% of cases resolve completely without surgery in 6-12 weeks with the right exercises.
  2. The myth that won't die: Bed rest does NOT help sciatica — every major clinical guideline says it makes outcomes worse. The worst thing you can do is stop moving.
  3. Start here: Prone press-ups (pushing up from face-down like a cobra) and nerve gliding exercises done multiple times daily are the strongest evidence-backed first step.

Think of the sciatic nerve like an electrical cable running through a narrow tunnel in your lower back. When a disc bulges, it's like the tunnel walls squeezing the cable — the pain signal fires all the way down to your foot. But here's the key: the cable repairs itself if you keep it gently sliding through the tunnel. Lock it in place by resting, and the tunnel tightens around it. Move it with specific exercises, and the tunnel gradually opens back up.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Sciatica Management

Exercise Selection and Conservative Care | Lumbar Spine

Conviction: HIGH

Sciatica gets better with the right exercises — rest makes it worse.

Think of the sciatic nerve like an electrical cable running through a narrow tunnel in your lower back. When a disc bulges, it squeezes the tunnel walls against the cable — and the pain signal fires all the way down to your foot. But here's the key: the cable repairs itself if you keep it gently sliding through the tunnel. Lock it in place by resting, and the tunnel tightens around it. Move it with specific exercises, and the tunnel gradually opens back up.

  1. Here's what's really happening: A bulging disc is pressing on your sciatic nerve — but 60-80% of cases resolve completely without surgery in 6-12 weeks with the right exercises.
  2. The myth that won't die: Bed rest does NOT help sciatica — every major clinical guideline says it makes outcomes worse, and the worst thing you can do is stop moving.
  3. Start here: Prone press-ups (pushing up from face-down like a cobra) and nerve gliding exercises done multiple times daily are the strongest evidence-backed first step.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

What Works

Exercise-based treatment for sciatica

Tier 1 — Strong Evidence

Directional Preference / Centralization Exercises STRONG

Repeated movements (usually lumbar extension) that move symptoms from leg toward back. Multiple times daily, symptom-guided. Centralization during initial exam is the strongest predictor of recovery.

Timeline: Centralization often begins 1-2 weeks. Significant pain reduction 2-6 weeks.

Neural Mobilization (Nerve Glides) STRONG

Nerve sliders (gentle) progressing to tensioners as irritability settles. 10 reps x 3 sets. Effect sizes: pain reduction g = -1.097, disability reduction g = -0.964 — these are large effects.

Timeline: Pain reduction within 2-4 weeks with consistent daily practice.

Staying Active / General Aerobic Exercise STRONG

Walking, swimming, cycling. Bed rest is explicitly harmful — every CPG recommends against it. Remaining active maintains function and prevents deconditioning. Start day 1.

See Tier 2 and Tier 3 evidence

Tier 2 — Moderate Evidence

Trunk Stabilization / Motor Control MODERATE

Dead bugs, bird dogs, modified planks. 45-60 min sessions, 2x/week. More valuable for recurrence prevention than acute pain relief. May not be superior to general exercise long-term.

Manual Therapy (as adjunct only) MODERATE

Short-term pain relief when combined with exercise. No long-term benefit as standalone treatment. Use to buy a window for active exercise participation.

Tier 3 — Emerging Evidence

Progressive Resistance Training (Posterior Chain) EMERGING

Hip hinge patterns, trap-bar deadlifts, weighted carries. Limited direct RCT evidence for acute sciatica, but strong mechanistic rationale for building long-term spinal load tolerance. The gap between acute management and heavy loading is the biggest hole in current research.

What Doesn't Work

  • Bed rest — Explicitly harmful. Every guideline recommends against it. Worsens outcomes and prolongs disability.
  • Gabapentinoids / pregabalin — NICE 2020 contraindicated for sciatica. No functional benefit, significant dependency risk.
  • Opioids — NICE 2020 contraindicated. High harm potential with no evidence of benefit for radicular pain.
  • Lumbar traction — JOSPT guidelines recommend against routine use. Passive treatment that doesn't address the underlying issue.

Exercise Prescription

Prone Press-Ups

5-10 reps building to 3x10 | 4-6x daily

Lie face down, push upper body up keeping hips on ground. Like a cobra stretch. Should move leg pain closer to your back (centralization).

Sciatic Nerve Sliders

10 reps x 3 sets | 2-3x daily

Sit on chair, slump slightly. Straighten knee while looking UP. Bend knee while tucking chin. Smooth see-saw motion. Gentle — stop if leg pain worsens.

Nerve Tensioners

10 reps x 2 sets | 1-2x daily

Same position but straighten knee AND tuck chin at same time. Only progress here when sliders are comfortable. Moderate stretch OK, no sharp pain.

Dead Bug

3x8 each side | Daily

On back, arms to ceiling, knees 90 degrees. Lower opposite arm and leg slowly. Keep lower back pressed flat to ground.

Hip Hinge

3x10 | 3-4x weekly

Stand hip-width, slight knee bend. Push hips back like closing a car door with your backside. Keep back straight. Feel hamstrings and glutes work.

Return to Training

All criteria must be met before returning to full training intensity. These are binary checkboxes, not subjective feelings.

Red Flags — Refer Immediately

  • Cauda Equina Syndrome: Numbness around genitals/bottom, bladder or bowel problems, weakness in both legs — EMERGENCY. Go to A&E/ER immediately.
  • Progressive weakness: Foot drop getting worse, increasing leg weakness over days — urgent surgical referral
  • Cancer signs: History of cancer + unexplained weight loss + pain worse at night/rest — GP referral for imaging
  • Infection signs: Fever, night sweats, recent infection + immunosuppression — GP referral for blood work + MRI

Real World vs Lab

Clinic Supervision vs Home Exercise

The research used clinic-supervised sessions (2x/week, 60 minutes, 8 weeks). Real patients get a sheet of exercises and much lower adherence.

Adjustment: Front-load clinic sessions in weeks 1-4 for technique mastery. Keep home exercises to 3-4 max. Use video follow-along.

Patient Expectations vs Natural History

Acute sciatica improves within 2-6 weeks in most cases regardless of intervention. Patients expecting a quick fix from passive treatments abandon rehab during normal symptom fluctuations.

Adjustment: Set expectations at visit 1 — "This will fluctuate. Bad days don't mean you're going backwards. The exercises work over weeks, not days."

Fixed Protocols vs Irritable Nerves

Research prescribes fixed sets/reps (e.g., 3x10 nerve glides). But irritable neural tissue can't tolerate standardized dosing — pushing through nerve pain causes flare-ups.

Adjustment: Use symptom-guided dosing — "Do as many as you can BEFORE symptoms increase beyond baseline. That's your dose today."

What's Actually Going On

The sciatic nerve is the largest nerve in your body, formed from nerve roots L4-S3 exiting the lower spine. In about 90% of sciatica cases, a lumbar disc herniation compresses or chemically irritates one of these roots — usually L5 or S1.

Lumbar spine anatomy showing disc herniation compressing sciatic nerve root

The disc material triggers an inflammatory cascade around the nerve root, causing pain, tingling, or numbness radiating down the leg. The critical insight: the pain isn't purely mechanical compression — chemical inflammation plays a major role. This is why symptoms fluctuate significantly day-to-day and why the natural history is generally favorable even without surgery.

The most common nerve roots affected are L5 (pain down the lateral leg and top of the foot) and S1 (pain down the back of the calf and lateral foot). Knowing which root is affected guides both diagnosis and exercise selection.

How to Identify It

Clinical assessment of sciatic nerve tension

Subjective Clues

Top Diagnostic Tests

Slump Test Sn: 84-91% | Sp: 70-83%
Best single test — good at both catching and confirming sciatica. Seated, slump forward, straighten knee. Positive if leg pain reproduced and relieved by looking up.

Crossed Straight Leg Raise Sn: 28-29% | Sp: 88-90%
Highly specific — if positive, strongly confirms disc herniation. Raise the UNAFFECTED leg; positive if pain in the AFFECTED leg.

Straight Leg Raise (SLR) Sn: 91-92% | Sp: 26-28%
Highly sensitive — great for ruling OUT sciatica. If negative, very unlikely to be a disc problem. But many false positives (hamstring tightness, general back pain).

The Debate

Generic Advice vs Structured Exercise

Cochrane Reviews, 2002/2010

"Advise patients to stay active and avoid bed rest" — as the primary treatment approach

VS

Fernandez et al., 2015 (Systematic Review)

Structured exercise (directional preference + nerve mobilization) provides significantly better leg pain reduction than generic "stay active" advice

"Stay active" is the minimum baseline — but specific exercises targeting the nerve and disc are significantly more effective. The standard has moved beyond generic advice.

Medications Reversed

Various guidelines, pre-2016

Gabapentinoids (pregabalin/gabapentin) and opioids commonly prescribed for radicular leg pain

VS

NICE NG59 Update, 2020

Do NOT offer gabapentinoids, opioids, or oral corticosteroids for sciatica — no functional benefit, significant dependency and withdrawal harms

This is now a hard clinical guideline, not a suggestion. These medications carry real harm with no demonstrated benefit for sciatica specifically.

The Nuance

Surgery vs Conservative Care

60-80%
Resolve with conservative care alone in 6-12 weeks
1-2 years
When surgical and conservative outcomes converge (SPORT trial)

Surgery gets you better faster in the short term — significant improvement within weeks post-op. But by 1-2 years, most patients end up in a similar place whether they had surgery or not. The exceptions: Cauda Equina Syndrome and progressive neurological deficit need surgery. For everyone else, a structured 6-12 week conservative trial is the evidence-based first line.

Complex interplay of factors in sciatica recovery

The biggest gap in current research: the transition from acute pain management (directional preference, nerve glides) to heavy functional loading (deadlifts, squats, sport-specific movements) is poorly defined. Current literature jumps from "do gentle nerve slides" to "return to sport at 4-5 months" without a well-researched bridge between them.

Centralization during initial examination is the single strongest prognostic indicator for a good outcome — if your symptoms move toward your back with repeated movements, that's a very positive sign regardless of what the MRI shows.

Sources

NICE NG59 (2016, pharmacology update 2020)
UK national guideline for low back pain and sciatica. Strong recommendation against gabapentinoids, opioids, and oral corticosteroids for sciatica.
JOSPT Clinical Practice Guidelines (2021)
Most current CPG for lumbar radiculopathy. Endorses directional preference exercises and neural mobilization.
Cochrane Reviews (Bed rest for LBP/Sciatica)
Bed rest is harmful — remaining active is the universally recommended baseline. Structured exercise outperforms generic advice.
Fernandez et al., 2015 (Systematic Review)
Structured exercise provides superior short-term leg pain reduction compared to generic "stay active" advice.
Neural Mobilization Meta-Analysis
Large effect sizes for radiculopathy: pain Hedges' g = -1.097, disability Hedges' g = -0.964.
Weber 1983, Peul 2007 (SPORT Trial)
Landmark trials showing surgical vs conservative outcomes converge at 1-2 year follow-up for most patients.
BJSM 2026
STarT Back risk stratification tool failed to show clinically significant benefit over usual care outside its original UK trial setting.

Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

84 Strong evidence
80–100Strong evidence ◀
60–79Mixed but supportive
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

Treatment Priority — Sciatica Management

Evidence-based treatment order for uncomplicated cases. Start at the top — most people don't need the bottom.

Red flags, progressive weakness, or bowel/bladder changes require immediate medical assessment and change this pathway.

1st Line
Education & Reassurance
90% resolve within 6-12 weeks. Understanding prognosis reduces catastrophising
Graded Activity & Exercise
Movement within tolerance — not bed rest. Directional preference exercises if identified
2nd Line
Nerve Mobilization / Neural Glides
Sliders before tensioners. Graduated neural tissue loading once acute pain settles
Manual Therapy
Adjunct to exercise for short-term symptom relief, not standalone
Adjunct
Epidural Steroid Injection
Short-term pain relief window to enable exercise participation. Not a cure
Pain Medication (NSAIDs, Neuropathic Agents)
Symptom management to enable movement. Short courses preferred
Limited Evidence
Surgery (Discectomy)
Only with progressive neurological deficit or failure of conservative management >12 weeks

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