Most herniated disc patients are told they need surgery before they've genuinely exhausted conservative options. The research doesn't support that. At Physica Medica, a FAAOMPT-credentialed physical therapist — the highest clinical designation in orthopaedic manual PT — works with you one-on-one to reduce pain, restore movement, and give your disc the best possible environment to heal without going under the knife.
Your spinal discs are tough, fibrous structures that sit between vertebrae and absorb load. A herniation happens when the softer inner material pushes through the outer wall — sometimes pressing on nearby nerve tissue. That nerve compression is what produces sharp, radiating pain, numbness, or weakness down an arm or leg.
Here's what most patients aren't told: disc herniations frequently resolve or significantly reduce on their own, particularly in the lumbar spine. Studies using serial MRI have documented spontaneous resorption of herniated disc material over months — without surgery. The disc is not a static, broken structure. It responds to load management, movement, and time.
An MRI finding of herniation also doesn't automatically explain your pain. Imaging findings and symptoms frequently don't match. Plenty of people walk around with disc herniations visible on MRI and no pain at all. Clinical context — how you move, where your pain is, what makes it better or worse — matters far more than the image alone.
None of this means surgery is never appropriate. It means it's rarely the first answer. And it means the quality of your conservative care determines whether you actually need to get there.
For the majority of lumbar disc herniations, high-quality research consistently shows that well-executed conservative care produces outcomes comparable to surgical intervention at one and two-year follow-up. The difference is often in how quickly each approach delivers relief — not in where patients end up.
Had lower back spine disk herniation and nerve inflammation as a result. Couldn't walk; couldn't sit; couldn't bend. Max worked his magic, and in a matter of a short couple of months I'm back to 100% without surgery. Mind blowing.
Hands-on treatment for herniated disc pain is not one-size-fits-all. The approach depends on which direction your spine tolerates movement, where your nerve symptoms are, and how acute the presentation is. Every session at Physica Medica is one-on-one with the same doctoral-level therapist — no rotating staff, no aides.
Grade-specific joint mobilization to restore segmental mobility and reduce protective muscle guarding around the affected level. Applied based on clinical examination, not protocol.
→Many disc herniations respond to specific repeated movements that centralize pain — moving it away from the extremity and toward the spine. Identifying your directional preference is one of the most clinically useful things we can do in the first session.
→Significant muscle guarding is almost universal with disc herniations. Dry needling addresses the trigger points in paraspinal and hip musculature that perpetuate pain and limit movement — without disturbing the disc itself. It's a direct, targeted tool, not a gimmick.
→After a disc injury, the deep stabilizing muscles of the spine frequently stop firing correctly. Retraining that motor control — not just stretching or strengthening globally — is what prevents recurrence.
→For patients whose chronic pain is amplified by stress and nervous-system sensitization. Clinical breathwork instruction with proper contraindication screening. Not a class drop-in.
→Sciatica is one of the most common presentations associated with lumbar disc herniation. When a herniated disc compresses the sciatic nerve root — most often at L4-L5 or L5-S1 — it produces the characteristic pain, tingling, or numbness that runs from the lower back through the buttock and down the leg.
Referred pain from lumbar facet joints, piriformis syndrome, and other hip pathology can mimic sciatica closely. Accurate clinical differentiation matters because the treatment approach differs. A thorough neurological and orthopaedic examination is the starting point — not an assumption.
Physica Medica is out-of-network with most insurance plans. Sessions are one full hour with a doctoral-level PT — no aides, no double-booking, no 15-minute check-ins. Most patients pay $145–$220 per session, with partial reimbursement possible through out-of-network benefits depending on your plan.
Call us at 443-228-8029 before booking if you want to verify your out-of-network benefits. We'll help you understand what your plan is likely to cover so there are no surprises.
Your first session includes a full history, movement assessment, hands-on examination, and treatment — not just an intake. You'll leave with a clear picture of what's driving your pain and an honest estimate of how many sessions you're likely to need.
[ Real patient testimonial — herniated disc or sciatica recovery, Baltimore patient ][Patient Name] · Chronic low back pain, Canton resident
Can physical therapy heal a herniated disc without surgery? For many patients, yes — and the evidence supports trying it first. Herniated disc material can resorb over time, and conservative PT that addresses spinal mobility, muscle guarding, and movement patterns gives that process the best chance. Surgery becomes relevant when there's progressive neurological deficit or no response after a genuine conservative trial. We'll give you an honest read on which category you're in.
How long does it take for a herniated disc to heal with PT? Meaningful pain reduction typically begins within the first 3–6 sessions when the treatment approach is well-matched to your presentation. Full recovery — returning to training, work, or full activity without restriction — often takes 8–16 weeks depending on severity, chronicity, and how consistently you're able to follow through between sessions. We'll give you a realistic projection at your first visit, not a vague range.
Is dry needling safe for herniated disc pain? Yes, when performed by a trained clinician who understands spinal anatomy. Dry needling for disc-related pain targets the paraspinal and hip muscles — not the disc itself. It's used to address the significant muscle guarding and trigger point activity that almost always accompanies a herniation, and it's a well-supported adjunct to manual therapy for spinal pain. We'll only recommend it if it's clinically indicated for your specific presentation.
Honest framing: research supports both for specific indications, not as universal panaceas. The clinical question isn't "do these work" — it's whether your specific case has the pattern these are designed for. Dry needling earns its place when there are identifiable trigger points referring pain. Cupping earns its place when fascial restriction is part of the picture. We use these tools when the diagnosis calls for them and explain why each session, not as a default.