Back Pain When Walking: Causes, Diagnosis & Evidence-Based Treatment in Singapore

Why Does Your Back Hurt When You Walk?

Walking is usually considered a low-impact activity—but for some people, it triggers or worsens back pain.

You may notice:

  • Pain building up after walking for a period
  • Relief when sitting or bending forward
  • Discomfort in the lower back or buttocks
  • Reduced walking distance over time

👉 This often reflects how your spine handles repetitive loading and endurance, not just a single injury.


Common Causes of Back Pain When Walking

1. Lumbar Spinal Stenosis (Very Common in Older Adults)

  • Narrowing of spinal canal
  • Pain worse with walking or standing
  • Relief when bending forward or sitting
    👉 Classic “shopping cart sign”

2. Facet Joint Irritation

  • Pain from joints at the back of the spine
  • Worse with prolonged upright posture
  • Often improves with movement changes

3. Muscle Fatigue & Endurance Issues

  • Weak or fatigued core and back muscles
  • Pain builds gradually with walking
  • Improves with rest

4. Disc-Related Pain

  • Less common for walking pain alone
  • May be associated with other movements (sitting, bending)

👉 Most cases involve a combination of:
load + endurance + movement control


🧠 Pain Science Cornerstone (Biopsychosocial Model)

Walking-related pain is influenced by:

  • Biological: joints, discs, muscle endurance
  • Psychological: fear of walking, pacing habits
  • Lifestyle: activity levels, conditioning

Key takeaways:

  • Pain does not always equal damage
  • Reduced walking tolerance often reflects capacity, not severity

👉 See: “Why Pain Persists: Understanding Pain Science & Modern MSK Treatment.”


1. Diagnosis First: What’s Causing Your Pain?

At The Pain Relief Clinic:

  • A structured clinical assessment is performed
  • Walking pattern and posture are evaluated
  • Endurance, strength, and nerve signs are assessed

Imaging (X-ray or MRI) may be arranged within 1 working day when appropriate if:

  • Walking distance is significantly limited
  • There are leg symptoms (numbness, tingling)
  • Diagnosis is unclear

👉 This helps differentiate:

  • Spinal stenosis
  • Facet-related pain
  • Muscle/endurance-related pain

2. Progressive Loading & Rehabilitation (Core Foundation)

The key to recovery is:

Progressive Walking Tolerance + Strength Training

Walking is a load—it needs to be built up gradually.

Why This Matters

  • Avoiding walking → deconditioning → worse symptoms
  • Overwalking → flare-ups
  • Gradual progression → improved endurance

Active Rehabilitation May Include:

  • Core strengthening (stability and endurance)
  • Back extensor endurance training
  • Hip and glute strengthening
  • Walking progression programme
  • Postural and movement retraining

👉 The goal is to increase walking distance and comfort over time.

Rehabilitation is progressed step-by-step based on tolerance, rather than stopping completely when discomfort is present.


3. Walking & Activity Strategies

Helpful adjustments include:

  • Start with shorter walking distances
  • Gradually increase duration
  • Use intermittent rest breaks
  • Slight forward lean (if helpful for symptoms)

👉 Pacing is key to improvement.


4. Medication: Supporting Activity

Medication may help:

  • Reduce pain
  • Improve walking tolerance

First-Line Options

  • Paracetamol
  • Topical NSAIDs
  • Oral NSAIDs

Second-Line Options

  • COX-2 inhibitors
  • Short-term oral opioids (used cautiously)

👉 These are used to support rehabilitation, not as a long-term solution.


5. Injection Options (When Needed)

If symptoms persist:

  • Epidural steroid injections (especially for spinal stenosis or nerve pain)
  • Facet joint injections
  • Medial branch blocks / pulsed radiofrequency procedures

👉 These are used to reduce symptoms and enable walking progression, not replace it.


6. Integrated, Team-Based Care

At The Pain Relief Clinic:

  • Care is led by Dr. Terence Tan (SMC-licensed, 20+ years’ experience)
  • Working closely with MOH AHPC-licensed physiotherapists

Care includes:

  • Diagnosis
  • Walking and movement assessment
  • Progressive rehabilitation
  • Pain education
  • Load and endurance planning

Recovery focuses on restoring mobility, endurance, and confidence in walking.


7. When Should You Seek Further Assessment?

You should consider evaluation if:

  • Walking distance is progressively decreasing
  • Pain radiates into the legs
  • There is numbness or weakness
  • Pain persists beyond a few weeks
  • You are unsure of the cause

Final Takeaway

Back pain when walking is common—and often manageable.

A structured approach includes:

  1. Accurate diagnosis
  2. Pain science understanding (biopsychosocial model)
  3. Progressive loading rehabilitation
  4. Walking tolerance training
  5. Medication or injections when needed
  6. Integrated care with doctor + physiotherapist

👉 Modern MSK care focuses on restoring mobility, endurance, and independence, not just reducing pain.


FAQ

Q1: Why does my back hurt when I walk?
It may be due to spinal stenosis, joint irritation, or muscle fatigue.

Q2: Is this spinal stenosis?
It can be, especially if pain improves when sitting or bending forward.

Q3: Should I stop walking?
Not completely—walking should be gradually progressed.

Q4: Can physiotherapy help?
Yes, especially for improving endurance and movement control.