In 40 seconds
Sciatica is leg pain caused by irritation of one of the lumbar nerve roots — most commonly L4, L5, or S1. The pain follows the sciatic nerve path from the lower back into the buttock and down the leg. PEMF therapy reduces inflammation around the irritated nerve root and surrounding muscle, often producing meaningful pain relief within 2–3 weeks. It is not a substitute for assessment, imaging where indicated, or physiotherapy — but it is a useful adjunct that can shorten recovery time.
Quick facts
- Cause: Lumbar disc, stenosis, piriformis, or muscle spasm irritating a nerve root
- Lifetime risk: ~10–40% of UK adults will experience sciatica at some point
- Standard care: Activity modification, physiotherapy, time
- PEMF role: Reduces nerve-root and surrounding tissue inflammation
- Sessions: 2× per week for 4–8 weeks
- Red flags: Saddle anaesthesia, bladder/bowel changes — A&E immediately
What sciatica actually is
Sciatica isn't a diagnosis — it's a symptom. It describes leg pain that radiates from the lower back into the buttock and down the back of the leg, sometimes reaching the foot. The pain can be sharp, burning, or electric, and is often accompanied by tingling, numbness, or weakness in the affected leg.
The underlying cause is irritation of a lumbar nerve root, most often by:
- A bulging or herniated disc pressing on the nerve
- Spinal stenosis (narrowing of the spinal canal)
- Piriformis syndrome (muscle compressing the sciatic nerve)
- Spondylolisthesis or facet joint changes
How PEMF helps sciatica
The pain of sciatica isn't just structural — it's largely inflammatory. When a disc bulges or a muscle spasms around a nerve, the surrounding tissue floods with pro-inflammatory cytokines that sensitise and irritate the nerve. PEMF acts on this inflammatory cascade:
- Reduces pro-inflammatory cytokines around the nerve root
- Improves microcirculation to the irritated tissue
- Supports tissue repair in disc, muscle, and ligament
- Calms the surrounding nervous system, reducing pain signal amplification
People often describe PEMF as "taking the edge off" sciatica within the first few sessions — making movement and physiotherapy possible.
Typical UK protocol
| Phase | Frequency | Duration | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute | 2–3× per week | 2–3 weeks | Local PEMF over lumbar + along sciatic path, 30–40 min |
| Recovery | 2× per week | 3–6 weeks | Continued PEMF + nerve mobility + glute/core work |
| Maintenance | 1× per fortnight | Ongoing | Flare prevention |
Red flags — when to seek emergency assessment
Stop and go to A&E immediately if you have any of these:
- Saddle anaesthesia (numbness in the buttock/perineum/genital area)
- Bladder or bowel changes (incontinence or retention)
- Progressive leg weakness
- Bilateral leg symptoms
These can indicate cauda equina syndrome — a surgical emergency.
Contraindications
Standard PEMF contraindications. Spinal cord stimulators are a hard exclusion.
Frequently asked questions
Does PEMF help sciatica?
Sciatica is a symptom of nerve irritation, not a diagnosis. PEMF reduces inflammation around irritated nerve roots and surrounding muscle, often producing meaningful pain relief. It does not 'fix' an underlying disc bulge — but in most cases, the inflammation around the nerve drives the pain more than the structural finding does.
What's the difference between sciatica and lower back pain?
Lower back pain is localised to the lumbar region. Sciatica is pain that radiates down one leg following the sciatic nerve path — sometimes to the foot. The two often coexist. Sciatica usually means a nerve root in the lower back is being irritated by a disc, bone, or muscle.
How long does sciatica usually last?
Most acute sciatica episodes settle within 6–12 weeks with conservative treatment. Around 30% become longer-term. PEMF can shorten the timeline by reducing nerve-root inflammation more quickly.
Should I have an MRI for sciatica?
Not routinely in the first 6 weeks unless you have red flags (saddle anaesthesia, bladder/bowel changes, progressive neurological deficit). Most sciatica resolves without imaging.
Can PEMF replace nerve-root injections (epidural steroid)?
It depends on the severity. For mild-to-moderate sciatica, PEMF + physiotherapy + time often works without injections. For severe pain or significant neurological deficit, injections may be the right step. They aren't mutually exclusive.
Are there exercises I should avoid during sciatica?
Generally avoid loaded spinal flexion (heavy deadlifts, sit-ups) and pain-provoking positions. Walking, swimming, and gentle nerve mobility exercises are usually well tolerated. A physiotherapist will tailor this.
Looking for a PEMF clinic near you?
We list every credible PEMF therapy provider in the UK so you can find one near home.