Spinal Stenosis: Symptoms & Treatment

Spinal stenosis, normal vertebra
A normal vertebra is shown on the left. On the right, a small spinal canal, which causes spinal stenosis.
(Image credit: NIH.)

Spinal stenosis is a narrowing of the spinal canal, the opening created by the small hole found in each of the vertebrae that make up the human spinal column. As the canal narrows, it puts pressure on the spinal cord or nerve roots, causing pain, numbness or other problems. 

"It is typically considered a degenerative condition in that it is typically caused by a combination of bone spurs, joint capsule hypertrophy [enlargement of the fluid sac surrounding joints] and disc bulges. The final net result of these processes is that they conspire to narrow the canal where the nerves travel," said Dr. Lyle Young, an orthopedic surgeon at the Sonoran Spine Center in Phoenix.

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