Sciatica Chiropractor San Diego | Dr. Jordan Loewenstein, D.C. | San Diego Sports and Wellness
Conditions · UTC San Diego · Non-Surgical

Sciatica &
radiating leg pain
San Diego

Last updated: April 15, 2026

Shooting pain, burning numbness, or weakness traveling down your leg — Dr. Jordan Loewenstein identifies the exact nerve root or structure causing your symptoms and treats the source, not just the pain.

Full nerve root examination
Flexion-distraction decompression
Non-surgical, evidence-based care
ART Certified · Webster Certified · Most insurance accepted
L1 Through S1 + Peripheral
Full nerve root pattern identification
Source-First Diagnosis
Spine vs. piriformis vs. hip — correctly identified
Flexion-Distraction
Evidence-based disc decompression
Call (858) 558-3111
UTC · Near UCSD · Most insurance accepted

What is sciatica —
and why does
your leg hurt?

The word "sciatica" gets applied to almost any pain that travels down the leg — but that loose usage obscures what's actually happening. True sciatica means a nerve root exiting the lumbar or sacral spine is being compressed or irritated, sending pain, numbness, tingling, or weakness along its entire path. The sciatic nerve is the largest nerve in the body, formed by the L4 through S3 nerve roots, and it runs from the lower back through the buttock all the way to the foot.

But not all radiating leg pain is spinal sciatica. The piriformis muscle in the buttock can compress the sciatic nerve without any disc involvement. The sacroiliac joint can refer aching into the thigh. The hip can mimic an L2 or L3 disc herniation almost perfectly. Peripheral nerves at the knee or ankle can produce foot symptoms with zero back pain. Getting the diagnosis right determines whether treatment works.

Dr. Jordan Loewenstein performs a systematic clinical examination — neurological testing, orthopedic provocation tests, reflex assessment, and review of any available imaging — to identify the exact structure responsible for your pain before any treatment begins.

L4–S1
Most common disc levels causing true sciatica
40%
Of adults will experience sciatica at some point in their lifetime
80%
Of disc herniation cases resolve without surgery with appropriate conservative care
The most important question
Is your pain coming from the spine, the piriformis, the SI joint, the hip, or a peripheral nerve? The location of your pain alone doesn't answer this — only a structured clinical exam does. The interactive quiz below will help you identify your pattern before your visit.
Not sure which pattern matches yours? Take the 2-minute quiz below — it maps your symptoms to the most likely nerve root or structure and gives you a starting framework before your evaluation.
Take the Quiz →

Identify your
pain pattern

Different pain locations map to different nerve roots and structures. Expand any entry to see distinguishing symptoms, the full referral pattern, causes, and how chiropractic specifically addresses it.

🗺
Not sure which section to read? Start with the 2-minute quiz below — it will point you to the most likely pattern based on your specific symptoms, then you can expand that entry for the full clinical detail.
Exits at
L1 vertebra
Pain zone
Groin / upper inner thigh
Stays above
Mid-thigh
Patient-language symptoms
  • A deep ache or sharp pain in the groin area that doesn't feel like a muscle pull
  • Pain or tingling along the inguinal crease (the fold between abdomen and upper thigh)
  • Discomfort in the upper inner thigh or a feeling of heaviness in the hip flexor area
  • Occasional difficulty lifting the knee toward the chest
  • Pain that may feel like a hernia but no hernia is present
  • May worsen with prolonged standing or coughing/sneezing
How chiropractic addresses it
  • Lumbar flexion-distraction technique to gently decompress the L1 nerve root
  • Lumbar manipulation targeting L1/L2 segmental dysfunction
  • Psoas and hip flexor soft tissue release to reduce compressive load
  • Targeted core stabilization exercises to reduce disc pressure at L1/L2
⚠ Red flags
  • Groin pain with fever, unexplained weight loss, or constant night pain — rule out infection or tumor
  • Always differentiate clinically from inguinal hernia
  • Bilateral L1 symptoms — consider vertebral fracture or systemic pathology
Exits at
L1–L2 / L2–L3
Pain zone
Front / outer upper thigh
Stays above
Knee — no calf or foot symptoms
Patient-language symptoms
  • Aching or burning pain across the front and outer portion of the upper thigh
  • Weakness when lifting the knee — hip flexor region feels fatigued or unreliable
  • Pain that wraps from the lower back around to the front of the hip
  • A feeling that the front of the thigh is "asleep" or difficult to feel clearly
  • Positive femoral stretch test: lying face down, bending the knee causes front-of-thigh pain
How chiropractic addresses it
  • Upper lumbar mobilization and manipulation to restore motion and reduce nerve irritation
  • Flexion-distraction decompression at L1-L2 and L2-L3 levels
  • Hip flexor stretching and myofascial release (psoas, iliacus)
  • Femoral nerve neurodynamic mobilization (nerve slider technique)
⚠ Red flags
  • Rapid onset of bilateral hip flexor weakness — rule out cauda equina or vascular compromise
  • Femoral stretch test positive with significant quad weakness — consider urgent orthopedic referral
Exits at
L2–L3 / L3–L4
Pain zone
Front thigh to inner knee
Key sign
Quad weakness / knee buckling
Patient-language symptoms
  • Pain or aching from the lower back or hip down the front of the thigh toward the inner knee
  • The knee "gives out" or buckles unexpectedly, especially going downstairs or stepping off a curb
  • A feeling that the front of the thigh is weak or hard to engage
  • Inner knee aching that doesn't seem to come from the knee itself
  • Feels like a persistent pulled quadriceps that never fully heals
How chiropractic addresses it
  • Specific L3-L4 and L2-L3 lumbar manipulation or mobilization
  • Flexion-distraction technique for decompression without rotational stress
  • Quadriceps activation and lower limb stability rehabilitation
  • Femoral nerve neurodynamic mobilization (nerve slider technique)
⚠ Red flags
  • Significant or rapidly progressing quad weakness — requires urgent neurologic assessment
  • Bilateral L3 presentation — possible spinal canal compromise; imaging warranted
  • Differentiate from hip pathology (labral tear or OA can mimic L3)
Exits at
L3–L4
Pain zone
Inner shin / medial ankle
Key sign
Foot drop / patellar reflex loss
Patient-language symptoms
  • Pain, aching, or numbness running from the lower back down through the inner shin to the medial ankle
  • Weakness of the tibialis anterior — difficulty clearing the foot when walking, tripping over rugs
  • A dragging or heavy feeling in the lower leg with activity
  • Diminished or absent patellar (knee-jerk) reflex
  • Inner ankle area feels numb or tingles, as though it's fallen asleep
How chiropractic addresses it
  • Flexion-distraction decompression — evidence-based technique for reducing disc herniation at L3-L4
  • L3-L4 specific manipulation (when clinically appropriate and no significant foot drop)
  • Tibialis anterior strengthening and gait correction exercises
  • Neurodynamic nerve slider mobilization for the L4 nerve pathway
⚠ Red flags
  • Progressive foot drop — urgent imaging and possible surgical consultation
  • Bilateral L4 symptoms — rule out cauda equina syndrome immediately
  • Absent patellar reflex with rapid onset — do not delay referral for advanced imaging
Exits at
L4–L5 (most common)
Pain zone
Outer shin · Top of foot · Big toe
Key sign
Big toe extensor weakness
Patient-language symptoms
  • Pain, burning, or numbness from the lower back or buttock, down the outer shin, to the top of the foot and big toe
  • Weakness of the extensor hallucis longus — difficulty or inability to lift the big toe off the ground
  • The classic "slipped disc" sciatic pattern — the single most frequently affected nerve root
  • A numb or tingling patch on the top of the foot or between the first and second toes
  • Pain that intensifies with coughing, sneezing, or straining
  • Often wakes the patient at night due to position-dependent nerve tension
How chiropractic addresses it
  • Flexion-distraction technique — specifically validated for L4-L5 disc herniations; reduces intradiscal pressure and centralizes symptoms
  • Side-posture lumbosacral manipulation targeting L4-L5 (when appropriate)
  • McKenzie-based directional preference exercises to centralize symptoms
  • Neurodynamic mobilization for the sciatic/peroneal nerve tract
  • Ergonomic correction (lifting mechanics, sitting posture) to reduce L4-L5 disc load
⚠ Red flags
  • Progressive or rapid onset of big toe extensor weakness — urgent imaging
  • If symptoms are not centralizing with treatment — reassess diagnosis
  • Combined L4-L5 and L5-S1 involvement — large central disc herniation; rule out cauda equina
Exits at
L5–S1
Pain zone
Back of calf · Heel · Outer foot · Pinky toe
Key sign
Achilles reflex absent / calf weakness
Patient-language symptoms
  • Pain running from the lower back or buttock, down the back of the thigh, the back of the calf, and into the heel and outer edge of the foot toward the pinky toe
  • Weakness of the gastrocnemius (calf muscle) — difficulty rising up on tiptoes, especially on one foot
  • Absent or diminished Achilles (ankle-jerk) reflex — the most clinically reliable reflex for S1
  • Persistent aching in the heel that feels deep, not surface-level like plantar fasciitis
  • Burning along the back of the calf that intensifies with prolonged standing or walking
How chiropractic addresses it
  • Lumbosacral manipulation and flexion-distraction targeting L5-S1
  • Piriformis soft tissue release and hip external rotator stretching
  • Calf and Achilles complex eccentric loading for functional recovery
  • Neurodynamic tibial nerve mobilization (straight leg raise nerve slider)
  • Postural correction addressing excessive lumbar lordosis that loads L5-S1 posteriorly
⚠ Red flags
  • Bilateral absent Achilles reflexes with leg pain — consider spinal stenosis or systemic polyneuropathy
  • Rapid calf muscle weakness — rule out deep vein thrombosis
  • S1 pattern combined with bowel/bladder changes — possible cauda equina; immediate ER referral
⚠ This is a surgical emergency — do not wait
S2–S4 compression — most commonly from a large central disc herniation — threatens permanent loss of bowel and bladder control. The window for surgical decompression that preserves function is typically 24–48 hours. Go to the emergency room now if you have: inability to control urination or bowel movements; numbness in the saddle region (inner thighs, perineum, genitals); both legs going weak simultaneously; or sexual dysfunction of sudden onset accompanying back and leg pain.
UCSD Health ER: (619) 543-6222
If you cannot travel safely — call 911 immediately

Dr. Jordan Loewenstein screens every new patient for S2-S4 red flags at the initial visit and at every follow-up. This office is not the right first stop for these symptoms — your safety is always the first priority.

Source
Deep gluteal muscle
Nerve compressed
Sciatic nerve (distal)
Key feature
No back pain — purely gluteal
Patient-language symptoms
  • Deep aching or a "knife in the butt" pain in the middle of the gluteal region, not in the low back
  • Pain or tingling that travels down the back of the thigh but typically stops above or at the back of the knee
  • Sitting for more than 20–30 minutes becomes unbearable; patients shift constantly or prefer to stand
  • Pain worsens when crossing the leg (putting ankle on the opposite knee)
  • The affected hip feels stiff and restricted, especially with internal rotation
  • No low back pain — the problem is entirely in the hip and gluteal region
How chiropractic addresses it
  • Deep soft tissue therapy (myofascial release, ART-style technique) targeting the piriformis and hip external rotators
  • Hip mobilization and manipulation to restore joint motion and reduce muscle guarding
  • Stretching and strengthening protocols for the hip external rotator chain
  • Neurodynamic sciatic nerve mobilization to reduce neural tension in the posterior thigh
Source
Sacroiliac joint
Referral
Buttock / posterior thigh
Key feature
Pain stays above the knee
Patient-language symptoms
  • Low back and buttock pain at or just above the belt line, typically on one side
  • Pain that refers into the posterior thigh and buttock but almost never crosses below the knee
  • A dull, aching quality — not the sharp, electric sensation of a nerve being pinched
  • Pain worsens with transitions: getting up from a chair, rolling over in bed, getting in and out of a car
  • Tenderness directly over the dimple at the base of the lower back (posterior superior iliac spine)
  • Provoked with FABER, FADIR, Gaenslen's, or thigh thrust tests
How chiropractic addresses it
  • SI joint manipulation (side-posture or prone drop-piece technique)
  • Sacropelvic mobilization using muscle energy technique
  • Gluteal and piriformis strengthening to stabilize the SI joint
  • Pelvic alignment assessment with correction of functional leg length discrepancy
  • Webster Technique for pregnant patients with SI joint instability
Source
LFCN at inguinal ligament
Pain zone
Outer thigh only — not below knee
Key feature
No weakness — purely sensory
Patient-language symptoms
  • Burning, tingling, or numbness on the outer thigh only — from the outer hip crease to above the knee
  • A patch of skin that feels hypersensitive, as though clothing rubbing against it is painful
  • No back pain whatsoever — this is a purely peripheral nerve issue
  • No weakness in the leg — only sensory symptoms
  • Symptoms may worsen after standing for long periods, ease when sitting or bending slightly forward
How chiropractic addresses it
  • Pelvis and hip alignment correction to reduce inguinal ligament tension on the LFCN
  • Soft tissue release around the ASIS and hip flexor region
  • Patient education on clothing modifications (no tight waistbands, tool belts repositioned)
  • Ergonomic standing posture adjustment and referral for nerve block in persistent cases
Source
Femoral nerve / hip joint
Pain zone
Front thigh / groin / inner knee
Key test
Femoral stretch / hip provocation
Patient-language symptoms
  • Pain or numbness along the front and inner thigh, with possible radiation to the inner knee
  • Difficulty walking up stairs or standing from seated — quad strength feels unreliable
  • Pain worsens with hip extension (walking fast, standing on one leg, lying flat)
  • No back pain in isolated femoral entrapment — pain appears purely from hip/thigh
  • Hip labral tear: deep groin pain described as a "C" shape, with clicking or catching sensation
How chiropractic addresses it
  • Iliopsoas and hip flexor myofascial release to decompress the femoral nerve at the inguinal level
  • Lumbar and hip mobilization addressing the L2-L4 spinal contribution
  • Femoral nerve neurodynamic mobilization (femoral nerve slider)
  • Hip joint mobilization and traction; co-management with orthopedic surgeon for significant labral tears
Source
Lumbar facet joints
Referral
Gluteal / upper thigh
Key feature
Worse with extension / rotation
Patient-language symptoms
  • Vague, diffuse aching in the lower back, buttock, and upper thigh — hard to pin down exactly
  • Pain worse with extension (leaning backward) or sustained standing
  • Morning stiffness that loosens up with movement within the first hour
  • No sharp electric shooting or tingling — achy and heavy rather than neurogenic
  • Pain usually worse after prolonged inactivity and better with gentle movement
How chiropractic addresses it
  • HVLA manipulation restoring normal joint motion and reducing nociceptive input
  • Mobilization of lumbar facets for patients where HVLA is contraindicated
  • Extension-reducing exercise program and postural coaching
  • Patient education on activity modification and avoiding sustained extension
Mechanism
Spinal canal narrowing
Pattern
Bilateral / both legs
Key relief
Sitting / bending forward
Patient-language symptoms
  • Pain, heaviness, or cramping in both legs that comes on with walking — neurogenic claudication
  • Relieved by sitting down or bending forward (flexion opens the spinal canal)
  • Extension (arching back) worsens symptoms significantly
  • Classic description: "I can't walk through the grocery store without stopping to lean on the cart"
  • Most common in adults over 60 with degenerative spinal changes
How chiropractic addresses it
  • Flexion-biased treatment — flexion-distraction decompression is the cornerstone for stenosis
  • Core stabilization and extension-avoidance exercise program
  • Coordination with imaging and specialist co-management when appropriate
  • Activity modification and walking tolerance training
Key differentiating features
  • Pain, cramping, or heaviness in both calves that comes on with walking after a predictable distance
  • Symptoms clear reliably within a few minutes of standing still — not sitting or bending forward
  • No back pain and no radiation from the spine — typically bilateral and symmetric
  • Patients often have a history of smoking, diabetes, or cardiovascular disease
⚠ This is not a chiropractic condition

Vascular claudication requires urgent vascular surgery referral. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein screens for vascular causes at every new patient encounter and refers appropriately. Cold, pale, or pulseless leg = vascular emergency; call 911.

Which type of leg pain
do you have?

This quiz maps your symptom pattern to the most likely nerve root or structure. It is not a diagnosis — only a thorough clinical exam can confirm the source. Developed by Dr. Jordan Loewenstein based on clinical examination criteria used in practice.

Interactive Assessment
Where is your leg pain coming from?
10 questions · Not a diagnosis · Developed by Dr. Jordan Loewenstein, DC
Question 1 of 10
Please seek emergency care immediately
The symptoms you selected — changes in bladder or bowel control, saddle numbness, or both legs weakening rapidly — may indicate Cauda Equina Syndrome, a surgical emergency. The window for treatment that preserves bladder and bowel function is narrow.

Go to the nearest emergency room now. Do not drive yourself if symptoms are severe.
UCSD Health ER: (619) 543-6222
For severe bilateral leg weakness or inability to walk — call 911 immediately.
This office is not the appropriate first stop for these symptoms. Your safety is the priority.
Question 1 of 10
Your pattern suggests
Book an Evaluation →
This quiz is an educational tool only and does not constitute a diagnosis. Only a thorough clinical examination by a qualified provider can determine the true source of your symptoms. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein, DC · San Diego Sports and Wellness · 5151 Shoreham Place, Suite 175, San Diego, CA 92122 · (858) 558-3111

Sciatica treatment with
Dr. Jordan Loewenstein

Every treatment plan begins with identifying the exact source of your leg pain — because the technique that works for an L4-L5 disc herniation is different from the one that resolves piriformis syndrome. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein uses an integrated approach: hands-on decompression, nerve mobilization, soft tissue therapy, and targeted rehabilitation.

01
Flexion-Distraction Decompression
A specialized technique performed on a segmented table that gently tractions the lumbar spine while flexing it forward. This creates a negative pressure gradient inside the disc — drawing herniated material back toward center and reducing compression on the irritated nerve root. Sessions are slow, rhythmic, and painless. Evidence-validated specifically for L4-L5 and L5-S1 disc herniations.
02
Spinal Manipulation and Joint Mobilization
Chiropractic adjustment restores normal motion to spinal joints that have become restricted or hypomobile due to disc loading or inflammation. This is not generic "cracking" — each manipulation is targeted to a specific segmental level based on clinical findings. It reduces nociceptive input from the joint itself and improves the mechanical environment for the compressed nerve root to recover.
03
Soft Tissue Therapy and Piriformis Release
For non-discogenic presentations — piriformis syndrome, SI joint dysfunction, hip pathology — hands-on soft tissue work is the primary intervention. Dr. Loewenstein uses ART-style release techniques to address the piriformis, hip external rotators, psoas, and iliotibial band. Muscle tension that compounds nerve compression is directly targeted before it can perpetuate the cycle.
04
Neurodynamic Mobilization (Nerve Flossing)
When a nerve has been compressed or irritated, the nerve itself can become sensitized and lose its normal mobility within its canal. Neurodynamic mobilization uses specific leg and spine movements to gently slide the nerve through its pathway, reducing neural tension and restoring normal movement. A 2025 trial in the European Journal of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine found sciatic nerve sliders produced superior outcomes compared to conventional therapy alone.
05
Rehabilitative Exercise and Postural Correction
Hands-on care addresses the acute compression — but preventing recurrence requires restoring the mechanical stability that allowed the injury to occur. Every patient receives a targeted home exercise program: directional preference exercises for disc herniations, eccentric loading for tendinopathies, hip stabilization for SI joint and piriformis cases. Research consistently shows combined manipulation plus exercise outperforms either alone.
06
Red Flag Screening and Co-Management
Dr. Jordan Loewenstein screens every patient for signs of cauda equina syndrome, vascular claudication, fracture, and other conditions that fall outside the scope of chiropractic care. When appropriate, he co-manages with or refers to orthopedic surgeons, neurologists, or vascular specialists — and coordinates imaging interpretation. The goal is the right care for your specific presentation, not a one-size-fits-all adjustment sequence.
Book a Sciatica Evaluation

Backed by research · Most insurance accepted · UTC San Diego · Near UCSD

Chiropractic vs.
injections vs. surgery

Chiropractic, epidural steroid injections (ESIs), and surgery address sciatica through fundamentally different mechanisms. Evidence supports starting with the least invasive option — and the data shows that trying chiropractic first carries no clinical downside even if surgery becomes necessary later.

Option 1
Epidural Steroid Injection
  • Anti-inflammatory medication injected directly around the nerve root
  • Can dramatically reduce pain in the short term by reducing swelling
  • Does not address the underlying disc or joint pathology causing compression
  • Effects typically temporary — most patients need repeat injections
  • At one month, 62.7% of ESI patients reported meaningful improvement vs. 76.5% for chiropractic in a head-to-head RCT
  • Carries procedural risks: infection, steroid side effects, post-injection flare
Option 3 — When necessary
Surgery (Microdiscectomy)
  • Surgically removes the disc material compressing the nerve root
  • Appropriate when conservative care has failed, or when there is progressive neurological deficit
  • Carries real risks: infection, re-herniation, adjacent segment disease, anesthesia complications
  • Recovery period is typically 4–12 weeks; outcomes vary with patient selection
  • A landmark JMPT study found chiropractic manipulation was nearly as effective as microdiscectomy for disc herniation sciatica
  • Dr. Loewenstein will refer to a spine surgeon when surgery is genuinely the appropriate next step

Dr. Loewenstein's approach is
grounded in current evidence

The following studies are drawn from peer-reviewed journals and clinical practice guidelines. This is not a chiropractic organization advocating for chiropractic — these findings come from orthopedic sports medicine journals, mainstream physician organizations, and independent clinical trials.

01
A 2025 head-to-head study in the Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy found that HVLA spinal manipulation produced significantly greater reductions in pain for lumbar radiculopathy patients compared to both conventional physical therapy and lower-force spinal mobilization.
Giovannico G, et al. — High-velocity low-amplitude manipulation compared with conventional physiotherapy and spinal mobilization for lumbar radiculopathy.
02
A 2025 study in PLoS ONE found that sciatica patients who received chiropractic care had a significantly lower risk of opioid-related adverse events — including dependency, overdose, and overuse — compared to patients managed without chiropractic care.
Trager RJ, et al. — Chiropractic care and the risk of opioid-related adverse events in sciatica.
03
Sciatic nerve "flossing" — neurodynamic mobilization where the nerve is gently moved through its canal — produced superior pain relief and functional outcomes compared to conventional therapy alone for lumbar radiculopathy patients.
Shaheen AA, et al. — Sciatic nerve slider neurodynamic mobilization compared to conventional therapy for lumbar radiculopathy.
04
This prospective randomized clinical study found that chiropractic spinal manipulation was nearly as effective as microdiscectomy for sciatica from lumbar disc herniation. Patients who tried chiropractic first and later needed surgery had the same outcomes as those who went directly to surgery — confirming that a trial of chiropractic carries no clinical downside.
McMorland G, et al. — Manipulation or microdiscectomy for sciatica? J Manipulative Physiol Ther.
05
In a head-to-head comparison, 76.5% of chiropractic patients reported meaningful improvement at one month, compared to 62.7% in the epidural steroid injection group — suggesting chiropractic may offer faster and more complete short-term relief than injections for nerve root pain.
Pilot RCT comparing spinal manipulative therapy, epidural steroid injection, and self-care for lumbar radiculopathy. Referenced at chiro.org.
06
Adding manual therapy to an exercise program produced significantly greater improvements in short-term pain and physical function compared to exercise alone for patients with lumbar radiculopathy — validating the combined manipulation-plus-exercise approach used in UTC San Diego.
Narenthiran G, et al. — Manual therapy as an adjunct to exercise for lumbar radiculopathy: effects on short-term pain and function.
07
The American College of Physicians — the largest physician organization in the United States — recommends spinal manipulation as a first-line, evidence-based treatment for acute and subacute low back pain and radiculopathy, before medication or injections.
Qaseem A, et al. — Noninvasive Treatments for Acute, Subacute, and Chronic Low Back Pain: A Clinical Practice Guideline from the ACP. Ann Intern Med. 2017. doi:10.7326/M16-2367

Also treated by
Dr. Jordan Loewenstein

Sciatica rarely exists in isolation — many patients also deal with related spinal or musculoskeletal conditions. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein treats the full spectrum of spinal and nerve-related pain.

Low Back Pain
Neck Pain
Headaches & Migraines
Sports Injuries
Herniated Disc
Piriformis Syndrome
SI Joint Dysfunction
Spinal Stenosis
Pregnancy-Related Sciatica

Sciatica &
radiating leg pain
FAQs

The 14 most common questions patients ask about sciatica, radiating leg pain, and chiropractic care in San Diego.

Can chiropractic help?

Yes — chiropractic care is one of the most well-supported non-surgical treatments for sciatica, particularly when symptoms are caused by a disc herniation, nerve root compression, or spinal joint dysfunction in the lower back. Chiropractors use a combination of spinal manipulation, flexion-distraction decompression, and targeted soft tissue work to reduce pressure on the irritated nerve. Research published in peer-reviewed journals has found that patients receiving chiropractic manipulation for lumbar radiculopathy experience meaningful reductions in pain — and 2025 data shows chiropractic patients also have a significantly lower risk of opioid-related complications compared to medication-only management. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein performs a thorough evaluation to confirm that your leg pain is genuinely coming from the spine (and not from the hip, piriformis, or another source) before beginning any treatment plan. Book at sdspinecare.com.

A pinched nerve — clinically called nerve root compression or radiculopathy — occurs when a spinal disc, bone spur, or tight muscle compresses a nerve exiting the spine, producing pain, numbness, or weakness in the leg. Chiropractic care directly addresses the mechanical causes: adjustments restore normal joint motion and disc alignment, flexion-distraction decompression gently reduces intradiscal pressure and can help a bulging disc retract away from the nerve, and soft tissue work releases surrounding muscular tension. Many patients with confirmed disc herniations on MRI respond very well to chiropractic care and avoid the need for injections or surgery. Schedule an evaluation at sdspinecare.com.

Understanding your pain

This is one of the most important questions in diagnosing radiating leg pain. True spinal nerve root pain typically follows a predictable dermatomal pattern: it starts in the lower back or buttock, travels in a line down the thigh and into the calf or foot, and is often accompanied by numbness, tingling, or weakness in a specific zone. Non-spinal causes — such as piriformis syndrome, SI joint dysfunction, hip arthritis, or peripheral nerve entrapment — tend to produce pain that is more diffuse, stays above the knee, or is triggered by hip movements rather than spinal loading. Key clinical clues include whether coughing or sneezing worsens the pain (a sign of spinal origin), whether the pattern matches a known dermatome, and whether specific orthopedic tests reproduce symptoms in the spine vs. the hip. You can also take the interactive quiz on this page to get a preliminary sense of your pattern before your visit.

Pain that travels past the knee into the calf, shin, or foot is a sign that a nerve root is significantly irritated — and it does mean the compression is substantial enough to produce symptoms far from the spine. Clinically, this is called "peripheralization" of symptoms. However, this does NOT automatically mean surgery is necessary. Many patients with foot symptoms fully recover with chiropractic care, particularly flexion-distraction decompression, when treatment begins promptly. What matters most is the direction symptoms are moving: if your pain is "centralizing" — the foot pain retreating toward the back as you improve — that is a very favorable prognostic sign. Don't wait — book an evaluation with Dr. Jordan Loewenstein at sdspinecare.com.

Numbness or tingling in the foot is a sign that a sensory nerve fiber is being compressed or irritated. The specific location tells a great deal about which nerve root is involved: numbness on the top of the foot and big toe most commonly points to the L5 nerve root (often compressed by an L4-L5 disc herniation), while numbness at the heel and outer foot is more characteristic of S1 root compression (at L5-S1). If the numbness appears only on the bottom of the foot without any back pain, a peripheral cause such as tarsal tunnel syndrome should be considered. Foot numbness on its own is not an emergency — but if accompanied by weakness in the foot or leg, or any bladder or bowel changes, seek care immediately.

Burning, tingling, or numbness confined to the outer thigh — notably absent from the low back — is the hallmark presentation of meralgia paresthetica, caused by compression of the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve at the inguinal ligament. Unlike true sciatica, meralgia paresthetica involves a purely sensory nerve (no motor involvement, no weakness), and the affected zone is a well-defined patch on the front-outer thigh that doesn't extend to the knee or foot. Common triggers include tight waistbands, heavy tool belts, pregnancy, recent significant weight gain, or prolonged standing. Meralgia paresthetica often responds well to conservative treatment. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein can confirm the diagnosis through clinical examination — book at sdspinecare.com.

Yes — anterior (front of) thigh pain absolutely can originate from the spine. The L2, L3, and L4 nerve roots travel through the femoral nerve and refer pain to the front of the thigh, the inner knee, and the inner shin respectively. A disc herniation at L2-L3 or L3-L4 can cause anterior thigh pain that mimics a quadriceps strain, hip flexor issue, or even hip arthritis. Key questions: does the pain worsen when bending forward or with prolonged sitting? Is there any weakness in the quadriceps or a feeling that the knee might buckle? However, anterior thigh pain can also be caused by hip pathology (labral tear, FAI), femoral nerve entrapment, or other causes — all requiring careful differentiation. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein performs specific clinical tests to distinguish these patterns.

Treatment and timeline

Recovery timelines vary based on how long you've had symptoms, which nerve root is involved, the underlying cause (disc herniation vs. piriformis vs. stenosis), and how far the pain has traveled. For most patients with acute sciatica from a disc herniation — especially when treatment begins within the first few weeks — meaningful improvement is typically seen within 4–8 weeks of consistent chiropractic care. Research shows most patients improve at the 3-month mark, but those receiving early chiropractic care tend to reach improvement faster and with fewer complications. For patients with chronic or long-standing sciatica, or spinal stenosis, the timeline extends and the focus shifts from acute relief to sustained function and symptom management. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein will give you an honest, individualized prognosis based on your specific clinical picture at your first visit.

Yes — when performed by a qualified and experienced chiropractor who has reviewed your case and any relevant imaging, chiropractic care is considered a safe, evidence-based option for lumbar disc herniation with radiculopathy. Flexion-distraction decompression is specifically designed for disc herniations — it gently tractions the lumbar spine in a way that reduces intradiscal pressure and encourages the herniated disc material to retract away from the nerve. High-velocity manipulation at the involved disc level is used selectively and only when clinically appropriate. The research is clear that the majority of disc herniations — even large ones visible on MRI — resolve or reduce significantly without surgery when the underlying mechanical load is addressed. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein reviews all available imaging before beginning care and adjusts techniques accordingly.

Chiropractic addresses the mechanical root cause of nerve compression: restoring motion to the spinal joints, reducing disc bulging through decompression, and releasing soft tissue tension. Epidural steroid injections are anti-inflammatory — they reduce swelling around the nerve root and can dramatically reduce pain in the short term, but do not address the underlying disc or joint pathology causing the compression. Surgery removes or repairs the structural problem but carries procedural risks and a longer recovery. A landmark study found that chiropractic manipulation was nearly as effective as microdiscectomy for sciatica — and patients who tried chiropractic first and eventually needed surgery had the same final outcomes as those who went directly to surgery. Attempting chiropractic first carries no downside. At San Diego Sports and Wellness, Dr. Loewenstein will recommend the appropriate level of care and co-manage with other providers when needed.

Both chiropractors and physical therapists are valuable providers for sciatica, and in many cases the ideal approach involves both. Chiropractors focus on identifying and correcting the joint and disc mechanics compressing the nerve, using spinal manipulation, decompression, and soft tissue techniques. Physical therapists excel at progressive exercise rehabilitation, movement pattern correction, and functional restoration. Research on spinal manipulation plus exercise consistently outperforms either modality alone — which is why Dr. Jordan Loewenstein incorporates rehabilitative exercise guidance alongside hands-on chiropractic treatment in UTC San Diego. If your sciatica has a clear mechanical cause, starting with a chiropractic evaluation makes practical sense, as decompression techniques can rapidly reduce nerve tension before progressing to exercise.

Yes — pregnancy-related sciatica is one of the more common presentations Dr. Jordan Loewenstein treats in UTC San Diego, and chiropractic care can be safely and effectively adapted for pregnant patients at all trimesters. As pregnancy progresses, the growing uterus shifts the center of gravity forward, dramatically increasing the lumbar arch and loading the L4-L5 and L5-S1 discs and sacroiliac joints — the primary sources of sciatica in pregnancy. The hormone relaxin also loosens the pelvic ligaments, which can cause sacroiliac joint instability and referred pain into the posterior thigh. Treatment adaptations include Webster Technique (a specific chiropractic protocol for pelvic alignment in pregnancy), soft tissue release of the piriformis, and gentle mobilization. Dr. Loewenstein is Webster Certified. Meralgia paresthetica — burning outer thigh numbness — is also more common in pregnancy and responds well to conservative chiropractic and postural guidance.

Safety and red flags

Most leg pain — even severe sciatica — can wait for a scheduled chiropractic evaluation. However, go to the emergency room immediately if you experience: any loss of control of your bladder or bowel; numbness in the saddle region (inner thighs, perineum, genitals, inner buttocks); both legs going weak or numb simultaneously; or severe, constant lower back pain completely unresponsive to any position change and accompanied by fever. These symptoms may indicate cauda equina syndrome — a surgical emergency where the entire bundle of nerve roots at the base of the spine is compressed. The window for surgical intervention that preserves bladder and bowel function is narrow. UCSD Health Emergency Department: (619) 543-6222. For severe bilateral leg weakness or inability to walk, call 911. For all other leg and back pain presentations, the best next step is a thorough evaluation in UTC San Diego.

This is a very common and understandably confusing presentation. A disc can herniate into a nerve root channel and create intense leg symptoms without producing enough local inflammation to register as back pain. Additionally, several non-spinal causes of radiating leg pain involve no spinal component at all: piriformis syndrome compresses the sciatic nerve deep in the buttock; meralgia paresthetica affects the outer thigh nerve at the groin; SI joint dysfunction refers aching into the posterior thigh; and hip pathology can create anterior thigh and groin pain with no back pain whatsoever. The absence of back pain does not mean your leg pain is less serious or that the spine is definitely not involved. This is precisely why a thorough clinical examination matters more than symptom location alone. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein in UTC San Diego takes a systematic approach to identify the true source of leg pain, whether spinal or peripheral.

UTC San Diego · Non-Surgical · Evidence-Based

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Don't wait for sciatica to progress. Early chiropractic care produces faster, more complete recovery — and starting with chiropractic first carries no downside if other care is eventually needed. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein will identify the exact source and give you an honest prognosis at your first visit.

5151 Shoreham Place, Suite 175UTC San Diego, CA 92122Near UCSD · Sorrento Valley · La JollaMost insurance accepted
Other Conditions Dr. Loewenstein Treats
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