Spinal Stenosis Treatment in Bergen County, NJ
Spinal stenosis narrows the spinal canal — the bony tunnel that protects your spinal cord and nerve roots. When that tunnel gets tight, the nerves inside get squeezed. That pinching causes the pain, numbness, weakness, or “heavy legs” feeling that brings most patients through our doors. The good news: the majority of spinal stenosis cases respond to conservative, non-surgical care — especially when treatment starts before symptoms become severe.
What is spinal stenosis?
Your spine isn’t just a stack of bones — it’s a protective tunnel running from the base of your skull to your tailbone, with the spinal cord and nerve roots threading through it. Specifically, spinal stenosis happens when the inside of that tunnel narrows, leaving less room for the nerves. The narrowing can come from bone spurs, thickened ligaments, herniated disc material, or simply decades of degenerative wear.
There are two main types of spinal stenosis based on where the narrowing happens:
Lumbar spinal stenosis
Affects the lower back. Squeezed nerves typically refer symptoms into the buttocks, thighs, and legs. Many patients first notice it when walking or standing for more than a few minutes — the legs start aching, going numb, or feeling weak, and sitting down brings relief. This pattern has a name: “neurogenic claudication.”
Closer monitoring
Cervical spinal stenosis
Symptoms of spinal stenosis
Spinal stenosis is a slow-burn condition. In fact, most people develop it gradually over years, and it often starts as something easy to dismiss — a little tightness after a long walk, a leg that “falls asleep” too easily. Pay attention to symptoms that follow these patterns:
- Leg pain, cramping, or heaviness when walking or standing — that gets noticeably better when you sit down or lean forward (e.g., on a shopping cart)
- Numbness or tingling in the buttocks, thighs, or feet
- Weakness in the legs — feeling like your legs are “giving out” or having to grab a rail to climb stairs
- Lower back pain that may or may not be the dominant symptom
- Walking distance decreasing — finding yourself measuring routes by where you can sit and rest
- Numbness, tingling, or weakness in the arms or hands — sometimes one-sided, sometimes both
- Difficulty with fine motor skills — buttoning shirts, writing, handling small objects
- Balance and coordination changes — tripping more often, feeling unsteady
- Neck pain that may radiate into the shoulders or upper back
- In advanced cases: changes in bowel or bladder function (rare but warrants immediate medical attention)
Don’t wait — see a doctor right away if you have:
Most spinal stenosis develops slowly enough that there’s time to pursue conservative care. But certain symptoms need a medical evaluation right away — not to scare you, just to be safe:
- Sudden, severe weakness in the legs or arms
- Loss of bowel or bladder control
- Numbness in the groin or “saddle” area
- Rapidly progressing symptoms over days rather than months
If any of those apply, see a doctor or go to an ER before booking conservative care.
What causes spinal stenosis?
Osteoarthritis & bone spurs
As cartilage in the spinal joints wears down, the body grows bone spurs that take up space in the canal
Previous injury or surgery
Old trauma or scar tissue
Spondylolisthesis
When one vertebra slips forward over another, narrowing the canal
Congenital narrow canal
Some people are born with a narrower-than-average spinal canal, which means stenosis can develop earlier
Herniated or bulging discs
Disc material pushed into the canal narrows the available space
Less common
Tumors, infections, Paget's disease, or other systemic conditions
Thickened ligaments
The ligamentum flavum, which runs along the back of the spinal canal, can thicken with age and bulge inward
How We Identify Your Cause
Non-surgical spinal stenosis treatment at Spine & Health Center
For most patients with mild-to-moderate spinal stenosis, conservative non-surgical care is the first-line approach — and often the only treatment that’s needed. We reserve surgery for severe or progressive cases only. As a result, our clinics combine multiple non-surgical modalities so we can address the underlying mechanics, not just the symptoms.
1. Spinal decompression therapy
2. Physical therapy and targeted exercise
3. Chiropractic care
4. Class IV laser therapy
Posture, movement, and lifestyle
When surgery may be necessary
We are a non-surgical clinic, but we won’t pretend surgery is never the right call. For a small number of patients — usually those with severe progressive weakness, persistent bowel or bladder dysfunction, or unrelenting neurological symptoms despite full conservative care — surgical decompression (laminectomy or fusion) is the appropriate next step.
If your case warrants it, we’ll tell you. We work alongside surgeons in the area for the small subset of cases that need them. For most patients, that’s a conversation we never have to have.
What to expect at your first visit
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A full history — when symptoms started, what makes them better or worse, what you've tried, what's working and what isn't
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A physical exam — testing strength, reflexes, sensation, range of motion, and walking pattern
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A review of any imaging you've already had (MRI, X-ray, CT) — bring it on a disc, USB, or patient portal access
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A treatment plan tailored to your severity and goals
If you haven’t had imaging and your provider thinks it’s needed, we’ll refer for an MRI before starting active treatment. For mild or early-stage stenosis, conservative care can often start the same day.
Most patients begin with 2 to 3 visits per week for the first few weeks, tapering as symptoms improve. We re-evaluate progress every few weeks and adjust the plan based on what’s working.