Lumbar Epidural Steroid Injection in Cincinnati | Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates
Cincinnati, OH Pain Management Service

Lumbar Epidural Steroid Injection in Cincinnati

A lumbar epidural steroid injection is a minimally invasive procedure used to help reduce inflammation around irritated spinal nerves in the lower back. It is commonly considered for selected cases of sciatica, buttock pain, leg pain, and lumbar radicular pain.

What It Targets Lumbar radicular pain and sciatica
Technique Fluoroscopy-guided epidural injection
Role Anti-inflammatory pain relief
Setting Outpatient procedure planning

What is the lumbar epidural space?

The epidural space surrounds the dura, the membrane that protects the spinal cord and nerve roots. In the lumbar spine, inflammation in this area can contribute to low back pain, buttock pain, leg pain, sciatica, numbness, or tingling when a nerve root becomes irritated or compressed.

Main Purpose Reduce nerve-root inflammation
Common Symptoms Low back, buttock, and leg pain
Why Inject Calm radicular pain and improve function
Lumbar epidural steroid injections are most often discussed for radicular pain, meaning pain that travels along the course of an irritated spinal nerve.

Who may be a candidate?

Lumbar epidural steroid injections may be considered when a clinician suspects that inflammation around a lumbar nerve root is contributing to pain and more conservative treatment has not been enough.

Sciatica or radiating leg pain

Pain that starts in the lower back or buttock and travels down the leg is one of the most common reasons a lumbar epidural steroid injection is considered.

Disc herniation or stenosis

Herniated discs, spinal stenosis, and other causes of lumbar nerve-root irritation are commonly discussed indications.

Numbness or tingling

Pins-and-needles, sensory change, or burning pain following a lumbar nerve pattern may support a more targeted epidural treatment plan.

After conservative treatment

The procedure is often considered after medication, therapy, activity changes, or time have not improved symptoms enough.

  • Common causes of lumbar radicular pain include disc herniation, foraminal narrowing, and stenosis.
  • These injections are not the right answer for every kind of low back pain, which is why diagnosis matters.
  • This page also naturally targets phrases like “lumbar epidural steroid injection Cincinnati,” “sciatica injection Cincinnati,” and “low back pain injection Cincinnati.”

How the procedure works

The goal is to place medication into the lumbar epidural space so the steroid can reach inflamed nerve-root tissue and help reduce pain.

01

Pre-procedure planning

The pain pattern, physical exam, imaging, and medications are reviewed to confirm whether a lumbar epidural approach is reasonable.

02

Skin numbing and positioning

The area is cleaned, the patient is positioned for the selected lumbar level, and local anesthetic is used to numb the skin.

03

Image-guided epidural placement

A needle is advanced into the epidural space with fluoroscopy, and contrast is typically used to confirm correct placement.

04

Medication delivery

Local anesthetic and corticosteroid are commonly injected. The anesthetic may provide early temporary relief, while the steroid often takes several days to show its effect.

Recovery and what to expect

Most patients go home the same day. Some feel temporary relief right away from the anesthetic, while the steroid effect may take several days to develop.

Early response

  • Temporary numbing may happen first
  • Mild soreness at the injection site is common
  • A short pain flare can happen before improvement

Next several days

  • Patients often resume regular activity the next day
  • The steroid may take days to show its effect
  • Follow-up helps assess whether the injection improved function and pain
The live Tri-State page notes that most patients return to work the next day after a lumbar epidural steroid injection.

How results are interpreted

Results vary. Some patients get temporary improvement for days or weeks, some improve for months, and others may have limited benefit.

When the injection helps

A meaningful reduction in leg pain, sciatica, or nerve-root irritation can support rehabilitation and help patients move more comfortably.

When relief is shorter

Some patients get only short-term relief, which is still useful but may not be enough on its own.

When symptoms persist

Limited improvement can suggest severe compression, overlapping pain generators, or a condition that needs a different treatment path.

Why the result matters

The response can help guide next steps in therapy, activity planning, medication strategy, or additional spine treatment.

Current reviews generally support lumbar ESIs for short-term radicular pain relief, but long-term outcomes vary and should be framed realistically.

Risks and safety considerations

Lumbar epidural steroid injections are commonly well tolerated, but like any spinal injection procedure, they carry real risks.

Common Short-Term Effects Soreness, transient pain flare, temporary numbness
Procedure Risks Bleeding, infection, dural puncture headache, nerve injury
Steroid Effects Flushing, fluid retention, mood change, blood sugar elevation
  • Most side effects are minor and temporary.
  • Dural puncture can cause a positional headache in some patients.
  • Serious complications are uncommon, but careful imaging and technique matter.

Frequently asked questions

These FAQs are written for patient clarity and strong search visibility.

What is a lumbar epidural steroid injection?
A lumbar epidural steroid injection is an image-guided injection used to place anti-inflammatory medication into the lumbar epidural space to help reduce irritation around spinal nerve roots.
What symptoms may lead to a lumbar epidural steroid injection?
It may be considered for low back pain with buttock or leg pain, sciatica, numbness, tingling, or other symptoms suggesting lumbar radicular pain.
What is injected during the procedure?
Local anesthetic and corticosteroid are commonly used. The anesthetic may provide temporary numbing, while the steroid is intended to reduce inflammation.
How is the procedure guided?
Lumbar epidural steroid injections are usually performed with fluoroscopy and contrast confirmation to improve placement accuracy.
How long does relief last?
Relief varies. Some patients improve for days, weeks, or months, while others have a shorter response or mainly gain temporary relief.
What are the possible risks?
Possible risks include soreness, transient pain flare, bleeding, infection, dural puncture headache, nerve injury, and steroid-related side effects such as temporary blood sugar elevation.

Clinical references

This page is written conservatively and grounded in the live practice site plus current procedural references.

  1. Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates — Lumbar Epidural Steroid Injection
  2. Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates — Services
  3. Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates — Sitemap
  4. StatPearls — Epidural Steroid Injections
  5. JBJS Essential Surgical Techniques — Lumbar Epidural Steroid Injections
  6. Spine-health — Indications for Lumbar Epidural Injections