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Signs Your Sciatica Is Getting Worse
Physiotherapywomens health

10 Warning Signs Your Sciatica Is Getting Worse

Dr. Kruti Raj (PT, MUHS, CPT, CMPT)
Last updated: June 30, 2026 12:01 PM
By Dr. Kruti Raj (PT, MUHS, CPT, CMPT)
20 Min Read
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Signs your sciatica is getting worse often appear when nerve irritation increases, causing changes in pain, sensation, or movement.

Sciatica is one of the most misunderstood types of nerve pain.

Many people think sciatica simply means “back pain going into the leg,” but it is much more than that.

It involves irritation or compression of the sciatic nerve, the longest and thickest nerve in the human body;

which starts from the lower spine and travels through the buttock and down the leg.

A mild episode of sciatica may improve with proper movement, physiotherapy, posture correction, and activity modification.

However, some people notice that their symptoms slowly start changing.

The pain becomes more intense, spreads further down the leg, or new symptoms like weakness and numbness appear.

Quick Answer

Your sciatica may be worsening if your pain spreads further down the leg, numbness increases, your leg becomes weak, walking becomes difficult, symptoms disturb sleep, or daily activities become harder.

A sudden loss of bladder or bowel control, numbness around the inner thighs, or severe weakness requires urgent medical evaluation.

As a physiotherapist, one of the most important things I tell my patients is this:

Pain is not the only measurement of whether sciatica is improving or worsening.

Your nerve function, walking ability, strength, sensation, and daily activities also tell an important story.

Studies show that most cases of sciatica improve with conservative treatment, but persistent or worsening neurological symptoms require proper assessment. (NCBI)

This article explains the 10 warning signs your sciatica may be getting worse, what these symptoms mean, and what you can do to protect your spine and nerve health.

Key Takeaways

  • Pain spreading from the back into the buttock, leg, foot, or toes may indicate increasing nerve irritation.
  • Growing numbness, tingling, or weakness should not be ignored.
  • Difficulty walking, climbing stairs, or controlling leg movement needs assessment.
  • Long sitting, poor posture, and incorrect lifting can increase symptoms.
  • Physiotherapy can help improve mobility, strength, nerve function, and confidence.
  • Emergency symptoms include bladder or bowel changes and saddle-area numbness.

What Does It Mean When Sciatica Gets Worse?

Sciatica usually happens when the sciatic nerve or its nerve roots become irritated.

Common causes include:

Herniated or Bulging Disc

The discs between your spinal bones act like cushions.

When part of a disc pushes outward, it can irritate nearby nerves.

Spinal Narrowing (Spinal Stenosis)

As we age, changes in the spine can reduce the space available for nerves.

Muscle-Related Nerve Irritation

Sometimes tight muscles around the hip and pelvis, such as the piriformis muscle, can contribute to sciatic-like symptoms.

Poor Movement Patterns

Repeated bending, lifting incorrectly, prolonged sitting, and weak supporting muscles may increase irritation.

Research published in The Lancet explains that sciatica has multiple causes and recovery depends on factors like the underlying condition, symptom severity, and individual response. (TheLancet)

When sciatica worsens, the body often gives clues before the condition becomes severe.

Signs Your Sciatica Is Getting Worse
Photo- Magnific- Signs Your Sciatica Is Getting Worse

1. Your Sciatica Pain Starts Traveling Further Down Your Leg

One of the earliest signs that sciatica may be worsening is a change in pain location.

For example:

Earlier:

  • Pain only in the lower back
  • Mild buttock discomfort

Later:

  • Pain reaches the thigh
  • Burning or electric pain moves into the calf
  • Symptoms reach the foot or toes

This spreading pattern matters because the sciatic nerve travels downward.

When irritation increases, symptoms may follow the pathway of the nerve.

Many patients tell me:

“My back pain is actually less, but now my leg hurts more.”

This is something that should not be ignored.

A lesser-known physiotherapy concept is called centralization.

During recovery, symptoms often move from the leg back toward the spine.

When the opposite happens, symptoms move farther away from the spine, it can suggest increased nerve sensitivity.

Research into mechanical diagnosis approaches has studied how symptom movement can help guide treatment decisions. (JOSPT)

What you can do

  • Avoid movements that clearly increase leg symptoms
  • Do not repeatedly test painful movements
  • Maintain gentle activity
  • Get assessed if pain is continuously moving downward

2. Numbness Is Increasing or Becoming Constant

Many people with sciatica experience tingling or pins-and-needles.

Occasional tingling may happen during nerve irritation, but increasing numbness is a different concern.

You may notice:

  • Your foot feels “dead”
  • Parts of your leg feel less sensitive
  • You cannot feel touch normally
  • Your skin feels different compared with the other leg

Nerves carry information about sensation.

When nerve signaling becomes affected, the brain may receive altered messages.

A common mistake is thinking:

“If the pain decreases, my nerve must be healing.”

Not always.

Sometimes nerve irritation can change from pain-dominant symptoms to numbness or altered sensation.

Clinical guidelines emphasize neurological assessment when sensory changes appear or progress. (NICE.Org)

Physiotherapy perspective

A physiotherapist checks:

  • Sensory changes
  • Reflexes
  • Muscle strength
  • Walking pattern
  • Functional ability

because nerve health is more than just pain levels.

3. Your Leg Feels Weak or Unstable

Weakness is one of the most important warning signs.

Pain can be uncomfortable, but weakness suggests that nerve signals to the muscles may be affected.

Sciatica Signs include:

  • Difficulty lifting your foot
  • Tripping more often
  • Trouble walking on your heels
  • Difficulty climbing stairs
  • Leg feels like it may collapse

This is different from normal muscle fatigue.

Normal tiredness:
“I exercised and my muscles feel exhausted.”

Possible nerve weakness:
“My leg does not respond properly.”

The sciatic nerve supplies several muscles of the leg.

If nerve communication becomes disrupted, strength can decrease.

Clinical guidelines for lumbar disc-related conditions emphasize monitoring neurological deficits such as progressive weakness. (PMC)

Do not ignore this sign

If weakness is increasing, professional evaluation becomes important.

4. Your Walking Pattern Changes

Your walking style can reveal a lot about nerve irritation.

You may notice:

  • Limping
  • Shorter steps
  • Avoiding one leg
  • Difficulty walking normally
  • Needing frequent breaks

Many people unconsciously change their movement to avoid pain.

The problem is that altered walking can create a chain reaction:

Pain → altered movement → muscle imbalance → more stress → more symptoms

A physiotherapist focuses not only on reducing pain but restoring normal movement patterns.

Research supports exercise-based rehabilitation as an important part of managing many cases of low back pain and related conditions. (WHO)

5. Sitting Becomes Increasingly Difficult and Painful

One of the most common complaints I hear from people with sciatica is:

“I can stand and walk, but sitting makes everything worse.”

Sitting increases pressure on the lower spine, especially when combined with poor posture, prolonged static positions, or slouched sitting.

A worsening pattern may look like:

  • Earlier you could sit for an hour comfortably
  • Now symptoms start within 10-15 minutes
  • You need to constantly shift positions
  • Driving becomes uncomfortable
  • Office work becomes difficult

The problem is not always sitting itself.

The bigger issue is staying still for long periods.

Your spine is designed for movement.

When you remain in one position for too long, muscles become less active, joints become stiff, and irritated nerves may become more sensitive.

A study published in The Lancet emphasized the importance of maintaining activity rather than relying on prolonged rest for many cases of low back pain. (The Lancet)

Physiotherapist tip

Instead of waiting until pain becomes severe:

  • Change position every 30-45 minutes
  • Take short walking breaks
  • Use proper chair support
  • Avoid sitting with one leg crossed for long durations

Small movement breaks can reduce repeated stress on the spine.

6. Your Pain Becomes Stronger at Night or Disturbs Sleep

Sleep disruption is a sign that your condition is affecting your nervous system and daily recovery.

You may notice:

  • Difficulty finding a comfortable sleeping position
  • Waking up because of leg pain
  • Pain when turning in bed
  • Increased stiffness after lying down

Sleep is essential for tissue healing and nervous system regulation.

Poor sleep can increase pain sensitivity, creating a cycle:

Poor sleep → increased sensitivity → stronger pain → poorer sleep

However, it is important to understand the difference between typical sciatica discomfort and concerning symptoms.

Seek medical advice if night pain is:

  • Severe and constant
  • Not related to position or movement
  • Associated with fever
  • Associated with unexplained weight loss
  • Progressively worsening

These symptoms may require evaluation for causes beyond typical nerve irritation.

7. Your Foot or Toes Start Feeling Different

Many people ignore changes in their feet because they assume it is “just circulation.”

But the sciatic nerve affects areas down into the lower leg and foot.

Warning signs include:

  • Foot feels numb
  • Toes feel strange
  • Difficulty lifting the front of your foot
  • Feeling like your shoe is loose because sensation changed
  • Burning sensations in the sole

A lesser-known fact:

Nerves are slow-healing structures.

Even after pressure is reduced, irritated nerves may take time to recover because nerve tissue heals gradually.

That is why early management matters.

Research on nerve-related symptoms highlights the importance of identifying neurological changes early rather than waiting until function declines. (Buzzrx)

8. Your Sciatica Is Becoming More Frequent

Another important signs of sciatica is a change in frequency.

You may notice:

Before:

  • Pain happened after heavy activity

Now:

  • Pain appears during normal daily tasks
  • Small movements trigger symptoms
  • Flare-ups happen more often

This can mean your nervous system has become more sensitive.

The nervous system is not simply a “wire.”

It adapts to repeated irritation.

When a nerve is repeatedly stressed, the body may become more protective, increasing sensitivity to movements that previously felt normal.

Common triggers that may worsen sensitivity:

  • Long sitting hours
  • Poor lifting technique
  • Sudden increase in exercise
  • Lack of sleep
  • High stress levels
  • Reduced physical activity

A balanced rehabilitation program focuses on gradually improving tolerance rather than completely avoiding movement.

9. You Develop Problems Controlling Bladder or Bowel Function (Emergency Warning Signs Of Sciatica)

This is a rare but is one of the serious sciatica warning signs.

Most people with sciatica will never experience this, but it is important to know.

Seek urgent medical attention if you experience:

  • New loss of bladder control
  • New bowel control problems
  • Numbness around the inner thighs or saddle area
  • Severe weakness in both legs

These symptoms may indicate significant nerve compression requiring immediate medical assessment.

This condition is uncommon, but healthcare guidelines identify these neurological symptoms as red flags (NICE.Org)

10. Normal Daily Activities Become Harder

Sometimes the biggest sign is not a specific symptom, it is losing function.

Ask yourself:

  • Can I walk the same distance?
  • Can I climb stairs normally?
  • Can I work comfortably?
  • Can I sleep properly?
  • Can I exercise like before?

If the answer keeps becoming “no,” your sciatica may be progressing.

Pain is only one part of the condition.

A successful recovery goal is not simply:

“Zero pain.”

It is:

“I can move, work, sleep, and live normally again.”

My Clinical Insight

In my experience treating patients with sciatica, many people wait because they believe:

“I will see someone if the pain becomes unbearable.”

But nerve conditions often respond better when addressed earlier.

I usually tell my patients to track three things:

1. Location

Is the pain moving further down the leg?

2. Function

Are you losing abilities you previously had?

3. Nerve signs of Sciatica

Are numbness, tingling, or weakness increasing?

These give much more information than pain intensity alone.

Physio Prescription

What Helps When Sciatica Is Getting Worse?

A physiotherapy approach is usually based on your specific symptoms.

Treatment may include:

Movement-Based Exercises

The right exercises can help restore mobility and improve tolerance.

Examples may include:

  • Gentle nerve mobility exercises
  • Core stabilization
  • Hip mobility exercises
  • Strengthening of supporting muscles

However, exercises should be selected carefully.

The wrong exercise at the wrong stage can increase symptoms.

Improve Your Daily Movement Strategy

Instead of:

“Rest until it disappears”

Try:

“Move within your safe range.”

Helpful habits:

  • Short walks
  • Frequent position changes
  • Gradual return to activity
  • Avoid sudden heavy lifting

Avoid These Common Mistakes That Make Sciatica Worse

Complete bed rest

Long periods of inactivity may increase stiffness and reduce muscle support.

Aggressive stretching

Many people forcefully stretch the painful leg thinking they are “releasing the nerve.”

But irritated nerves often dislike aggressive pulling.

Ignoring weakness

Pain can sometimes be tolerated, but progressive weakness needs attention.

Poor lifting habits

Avoid bending and twisting together under load.

Lesser-Known Tips to Support Sciatica Recovery

1. Your Walking Pattern Matters

A slow, controlled walk is often better than avoiding movement completely.

Walking helps maintain circulation, mobility, and confidence.

2. Stress Can Influence Pain Sensitivity

Pain is influenced by the nervous system, not only damaged tissues.

Stress, poor sleep, and anxiety can increase the sensitivity of the pain system.

3. Hip Strength Plays a Role

Weak hip muscles can affect how your pelvis and spine move during walking and daily activities.

A physiotherapist often assesses hip strength because the spine and hips work together.

Myth vs Reality

Myth: “More pain always means more damage.”

Reality:

Pain severity does not always perfectly match the amount of physical damage.

The nervous system can become highly sensitive.

Myth: “I should avoid all exercise.”

Reality:

Appropriate movement is usually part of recovery.

Myth: “Sciatica always requires surgery.”

Reality:

Many people improve with conservative treatment.

Surgery is usually considered only in specific situations such as severe neurological problems or persistent symptoms.

Final Word

Sciatica recovery is not about ignoring symptoms or fearing movement.

Your body gives signals, and learning to recognize them can help you take action sooner.

The most important warning signs of sciatica include:

  • Pain spreading farther down the leg
  • Increasing numbness
  • Weakness
  • Walking difficulty
  • Sleep disruption
  • Loss of daily function
  • Bladder or bowel changes

A physiotherapy assessment can help identify what is irritating the nerve and create a recovery plan based on your condition.

Your goal should not only be reducing pain, it should be restoring confidence, strength, and normal movement.

Frequently Asked Questions About Worsening Sciatica

1. How do I know if my sciatica is getting worse?

If pain travels further down your leg, numbness increases, weakness appears, or normal activities become difficult, your sciatica may be worsening.

2. Can sciatica get worse over time?

Yes. Without proper management, repeated irritation, poor movement habits, and prolonged inactivity may increase symptoms.

3. Is increasing numbness a serious sign?

Increasing numbness can indicate changes in nerve function and should be assessed, especially if it is spreading.

4. Can physiotherapy help worsening sciatica?

Physiotherapy can help many people by improving movement, reducing irritation, strengthening supporting muscles, and restoring function.

5. Should I stop exercising if I have sciatica?

Not always. The right type and intensity of exercise can support recovery, but painful movements should be modified.

6. What activities make sciatica worse?

Long sitting, poor lifting technique, sudden heavy exercise, and prolonged inactivity may aggravate symptoms.

7. Does severe sciatica always need surgery?

No. Many cases improve with conservative care. Surgery is considered in specific situations such as serious nerve compression or persistent symptoms.

8. When should I seek urgent help?

Seek urgent medical attention for bladder or bowel problems, saddle numbness, or significant leg weakness.

9. Can walking help sciatica?

Gentle walking may help maintain mobility and reduce stiffness for many people, depending on symptoms.

10. How long does sciatica take to improve?

Recovery time varies depending on the cause, severity, lifestyle factors, and treatment approach.

Stay tuned with us for more health related topics.

Follow us on LinkedIn and Instagram for more.

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Medical Disclaimer!

This article has been reviewed and written under the guidance of our Head Physiotherapist, Dr. Kruti Raj (PT, MUHS,CPT,CMPT). The information shared is intended for educational purposes only and should not be considered a substitute for personalized medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

Please consult us or any other qualified healthcare professional before beginning any exercise program, especially if you are experiencing pain, recovering from injury, or managing a medical condition.

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