The facet joints are small synovial joints connecting adjacent vertebrae at the back of the spine. They bear about 16% of axial load in neutral — but this spikes dramatically when you extend and rotate, making lifters who squat, deadlift, and overhead press particularly susceptible.
Most commonly triggered by a sudden loss of core bracing under heavy load (hyperextension during a squat or deadlift) or by cumulative end-range extension stress from pressing and hip thrusts. The thoracolumbar junction (T11-L2) is the most vulnerable zone — where the rigid rib-supported thoracic spine transitions to the mobile lumbar spine.
Three injury pathways in lifters:
Loss of bracing during a heavy lift → sudden hyperextension → the richly innervated joint capsule overstretches or synovial fringes become pinched between articular surfaces. Immediate localized pain and reflex paraspinal guarding.
Persistent end-range extension loading (overhead pressing, sumo lockout, hip thrusts) without adequate recovery → chronic synovitis → progressive capsular inflammation.
Long-term repetitive loading → hyaline cartilage degradation, osteophyte formation, joint hypertrophy. Essentially osteoarthritis of the facet joint. Limited intrinsic cartilage repair capacity.
Each facet joint receives dual innervation from the medial branches of the dorsal rami (at level and from above) — which is why pain often feels diffuse across 1-2 segments rather than pinpoint.
"I've got this deep ache right beside my spine that gets worse when I arch back or twist — it happened during deadlifts and now I can feel it every time I extend."
Individual red flags have poor standalone diagnostic accuracy with high false-positive rates. Post-test probability increases substantially only when multiple red flags cluster together.
CPG Reference: APTA/AOPT Clinical Practice Guidelines for Low Back Pain (George et al., 2021). No standalone CPG exists for thoracic facet joint irritation specifically.
Motor control reactivation → isolated spinal resistance → full compound barbell movements. Transversus abdominis + multifidus + gluteal strengthening offloads mechanical stress from facet joints. The fix is better loading, not less loading.
Joint mobilization/manipulation to unlock muscle guarding and facilitate faster return to active loading. Effective session-to-session but effects are short-lived without concurrent exercise. Never standalone.
Shift from "damage" model to understanding that the spine is robust and resilient. Fear-avoidance beliefs are the primary driver of chronicity. Must pair with active treatment.
Systematic re-introduction of extension and rotation under progressive load. Critical for athletes whose entire training involves the exact movements that provoke symptoms.
If thoracic rotation <40° on Lumbar Locked Rotation Test, thoracic stiffness is likely driving compensatory loading at T11-L2. Restore thoracic mobility to protect the junction.
Prolonged rest — deconditions spinal stabilizers, worsens loading long-term. Imaging without red flags — facet changes are common incidental findings in pain-free people; drives nocebo. Passive modalities alone (TENS, ultrasound) — zero long-term evidence. Braces for chronic use — prevents the muscle activation needed for recovery.
Arms up, knees 90°. Extend opposite arm and leg while keeping lower back flat. Core control, zero back pain.
All fours. Extend one arm + opposite leg. Hold 5s. Spine perfectly still — imagine balancing a cup of water.
Start from knees if needed, progress to feet. Obliques and glutes working. Stop if sharp back pain.
Gentle rhythmic spinal flexion/extension. Pain-free range only — don't push into sharp end-range extension.
Weight at chest keeps torso upright, reducing lumbar extension demand. Pain must stay below 3/10.
Deadlift from knee height. Limits flexion range, reducing facet stress. Progress depth gradually over weeks.
Cable chops or banded rotations. 4.5-5s per rep, 20-40% 1RM. Build rotational capacity without end-range stress.
Transition from goblet → front squat → back squat. Progress 2.5-5%/week with flawless mechanics.
Lower the blocks progressively until full ROM deadlift is achieved pain-free. Mechanics over load.
Seated press eliminates compensatory lumbar hyperextension. Graduate to standing when spine-neutral maintained.
You can't definitively diagnose this clinically. Kemp's test has a +LR of only 1.29 — barely better than chance. Every facet pain diagnosis in conservative practice is a probability assessment. Dual medial branch blocks are the gold standard but invasive. Treat the pattern, not the label.
Imaging will mislead you. Facet joint hypertrophy and osteophytes are ubiquitous incidental findings on MRI in pain-free populations. Ordering a scan without red flags will often show "something" that looks alarming but is completely normal age-related change — and the nocebo effect of that finding can be worse than the original problem.
Fear-avoidance is the real enemy. Psychosocial variables — not tissue pathology — are the primary drivers of chronicity. A lifter who believes their spine is "damaged" and avoids loading will decondition faster and hurt longer than one who understands this is a capacity problem with a loading solution.
The thoracolumbar junction is the weak link. T11-L2 is where the rigid thoracic cage ends and the mobile lumbar spine begins. Poor thoracic rotation mobility forces compensatory extension and rotation at this junction — treating the facet without addressing thoracic stiffness above it is treating the symptom, not the cause.
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.
A one-page action summary for this condition — what to do, when to progress, and when to stop. Straight to your inbox.
Get the free guideThe Verdict is built by the same team behind Precision Metrics — a physique and health coaching practice with 300+ clients coached. Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT and Luke Holbrook lead the coaching.
Book a free consultationConviction-scored verdicts on supplements, nutrition, training, physio, and recovery.