Lumbar Facet-Joint Injections in Cincinnati
Lumbar facet-joint injections are used both as a minimally invasive treatment for lower-back pain caused by inflamed facet joints and as a diagnostic tool to help determine whether those joints are the source of pain. When lumbar facet joints become irritated, pain may stay in the low back or refer into the buttocks or hips.
What are lumbar facet joints?
Lumbar facet joints are the small paired joints at the back of the lower spine that connect one vertebra to the next. They help stabilize motion and guide how the lumbar spine bends and twists. When inflamed or arthritic, they can contribute to localized low-back pain and selected referred pain patterns.
Who may be a candidate?
Lumbar facet-joint injections may be discussed when a clinician suspects that one or more lumbar facet joints are contributing to symptoms and conservative care has not been enough.
Lower-back pain
Patients with persistent lower-back pain, especially pain worsened by standing, twisting, rotation, or extension, may be evaluated for facet-mediated pain.
Buttock or hip referral
Lumbar facet pain can sometimes refer into the buttocks, hips, groin, or upper thigh, which is one reason precise diagnosis matters.
Common contributors
Facet pain may be associated with osteoarthritis, trauma, wear-and-tear changes, spinal instability, and selected degenerative spine conditions.
After conservative treatment
These injections are often considered after anti-inflammatory medication, physical therapy, bracing, or other conservative methods have failed to relieve symptoms enough.
- Current references note that conservative care is usually tried first before facet injection is considered.
- Patients with infection, certain bleeding risks, contrast or medication allergy, or pregnancy may need a different plan.
- This page also naturally targets phrases like “lumbar facet joint injections Cincinnati,” “lumbar facet pain Cincinnati,” and “lower back pain injection Cincinnati.”
How the procedure works
The goal is to place medication into or around the targeted lumbar facet joint to help reduce inflammation and evaluate whether that joint is contributing to pain.
Pre-procedure planning
The pain pattern, exam findings, prior treatment, imaging, and safety considerations are reviewed to decide which lumbar level or levels to target.
Skin numbing and positioning
The patient is positioned prone, the skin is cleaned, and local anesthetic is used to numb the skin and soft tissues before the needle is advanced.
Image-guided placement
Using fluoroscopy or similar imaging, the needle is guided toward the lumbar facet joint. Contrast may be used to confirm accurate placement.
Medication delivery
A local anesthetic and corticosteroid are commonly injected. The anesthetic may provide immediate temporary relief, while the steroid effect may take several days to become clearer.
Recovery and what to expect
Most patients go home the same day. Temporary pain relief may occur first from the anesthetic, while the steroid may reduce inflammation gradually over the next several days.
Early response
- Temporary numbing may happen first
- Mild soreness at the injection site is common
- Ice and acetaminophen are often used for short-term discomfort
Next several days
- Normal activities are often resumed the next day
- The steroid effect may take days to show
- A follow-up visit helps assess how meaningful the response was
How results are interpreted
Results vary. Some patients get short-term improvement, some feel longer relief, and others gain mostly diagnostic clarity about whether the lumbar facet joint is contributing to pain.
When the injection helps diagnostically
If pain improves meaningfully in the expected pattern, it suggests the targeted lumbar facet joint may be a relevant pain source.
When the injection helps therapeutically
Some patients experience relief for weeks or months, while others may need a different or additional treatment path.
When relief is limited
Limited improvement may suggest a different pain generator, overlapping conditions, or a pain pattern that is not primarily facet-mediated.
Possible next steps
Depending on the response, treatment planning may include continued conservative care, rehabilitation, or other facet-targeted options such as medial branch techniques or radiofrequency treatment.
Current references note that relief with facet injections is variable and repeated procedures may sometimes be considered depending on clinical response and treatment strategy.
Risks and safety considerations
Lumbar facet-joint injections are generally considered safe when performed with image guidance, but like any spine injection, they still carry real risks.
- Most side effects are mild and temporary.
- Image guidance matters because accurate placement improves both diagnostic value and safety.
- Patients should review medications, bleeding risk, allergies, and pregnancy status with the treating clinician before the procedure.
Frequently asked questions
These FAQs are written for patient clarity and strong search visibility.
What is a lumbar facet-joint injection?
What symptoms may lead to a lumbar facet-joint injection?
What is injected during the procedure?
How is the procedure guided?
How long does relief last?
What are the possible risks?
Clinical references
This page is written conservatively and grounded in the live practice site plus current clinical references.
- Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates — Services
- Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates — Sitemap
- Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates — Facet-Joint Injections
- StatPearls — Facet Joint Injection
- Mayo Clinic Orthopedics & Sports Medicine — Facet Arthritis Overview
- Mayo Clinic Orthopedics & Sports Medicine — Facet Arthritis Treatment
- Johns Hopkins Medicine — Pain Center / Facet Joint Injections