Epidural Steroid Injection
Epidural steroid injections may be considered for foraminal stenosis when nerve irritation causes significant pain, tingling, numbness, or difficulty walking. The goal is to reduce inflammation around the compressed nerve root, but the benefit is usually modest and short-term, often lasting only 2–3 weeks. A 2025 AAN systematic review found that epidural corticosteroid injections for spinal stenosis have small, short-lived effects. Transforaminal epidural steroid injections, which target the affected nerve more directly, may reduce pain and improve walking distance at 4 weeks, especially in moderate rather than severe stenosis.
Treatment Type: Procedural
Treatment Class: N/A
Treatment Modality: Injection
Review Summary
Based on the provided review, Epidural Steroid Injection can help relieve symptoms of foraminal stenosis by reducing inflammation around the compressed nerve, with lidocaine providing immediate pain relief and the steroid offering longer-lasting but temporary relief of pain, numbness, tingling, or walking tolerance. It is described as a useful temporary measure for patients who haven't responded adequately to medications or physical therapy but are not yet ready for surgery, though the effectiveness is limited and may not be permanent.
This summary was generated by users' reviews
Breakdown by Category
Each categories are rated on a 1–5 scale, with 5 being the most favorable outcome and 1 being the least. These scores are averaged across all user reviews to provide a clear sense of how this treatment typically performs in each area.
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4.0
AI Summary of User Experiences
Not medical advice.
Based on the provided review, Epidural Steroid Injection can help relieve symptoms of foraminal stenosis by reducing inflammation around the compressed nerve, with lidocaine providing immediate pain relief and the steroid offering longer-lasting but temporary relief of pain, numbness, tingling, or walking tolerance. It is described as a useful temporary measure for patients who haven't responded adequately to medications or physical therapy but are not yet ready for surgery, though the effectiveness is limited and may not be permanent.
Reviews
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