Sciatica Pain When Sitting: Why It Gets Worse & What You Can Do (Singapore Guide)

Why Does Sciatica Get Worse When You Sit?

If your leg pain worsens when sitting, you’re not alone.

You may notice:

  • Pain radiating down the leg when sitting
  • Tingling or numbness after sitting for a while
  • Relief when standing or walking
  • Difficulty sitting through meetings, meals, or travel

👉 Sitting increases pressure on the discs and nerves, which can aggravate sciatica symptoms.


What Happens in the Spine When You Sit?

When you sit:

  • The spine moves into flexion (forward bending)
  • Pressure on the lumbar discs increases
  • Nerve roots may become more compressed or irritated

👉 This explains why:

  • Sitting often worsens symptoms
  • Standing or walking may relieve them

Common Causes of Sciatica Worse When Sitting

1. Lumbar Disc Herniation (Most Common)

  • Disc bulge/herniation presses on a nerve
  • Sitting increases disc pressure
  • Symptoms worsen with prolonged sitting

2. Nerve Sensitisation

  • The nerve becomes irritable and sensitive
  • Even low loads (like sitting) can trigger symptoms

3. Poor Load Tolerance

  • Reduced capacity to tolerate prolonged positions
  • Symptoms build up over time

👉 Most cases involve:
disc loading + nerve sensitivity + reduced tolerance


🧠 Pain Science Cornerstone (Biopsychosocial Model)

Sitting-related nerve pain is influenced by:

  • Biological: disc pressure, nerve irritation
  • Psychological: fear of sitting, anticipation of pain
  • Lifestyle: long hours of sitting, inactivity

Key takeaways:

  • Pain does not always equal worsening damage
  • Sitting intolerance is often modifiable
  • Recovery involves improving capacity, not just avoiding sitting

1. Diagnosis First: What’s Driving Your Symptoms?

At The Pain Relief Clinic:

  • A structured clinical assessment is performed
  • Sitting tolerance and posture are evaluated
  • Nerve function and movement patterns are assessed

Imaging (MRI especially) may be arranged within 1 working day when appropriate if:

  • Symptoms persist
  • There are neurological deficits
  • Diagnosis is unclear

👉 This helps determine:

  • Disc-related compression
  • Nerve sensitisation
  • Functional movement issues

2. Progressive Loading & Rehabilitation (Core Foundation)

The key to recovery is:

Progressive Sitting Tolerance + Nerve-Sensitive Rehabilitation

The goal is to:
👉 Reduce nerve irritation while rebuilding tolerance to sitting

Why This Matters

  • Avoiding sitting completely → reduced tolerance
  • Prolonged sitting → overload
  • Gradual exposure → improved resilience

Active Rehabilitation May Include:

  • Core strengthening
  • Nerve mobility exercises (neural glides)
  • Gradual sitting exposure training
  • Walking and movement progression
  • Load management strategies

👉 The goal is to sit longer with less discomfort over time.

Rehabilitation is progressed step-by-step based on tolerance.


3. Practical Sitting Strategies

Helpful adjustments include:

  • Take regular standing or walking breaks
  • Avoid prolonged static sitting
  • Use lumbar support if helpful
  • Alternate sitting positions

👉 Movement breaks are often more effective than perfect posture.


4. Medication: Supporting Function

Medication may help:

  • Reduce nerve-related pain
  • Improve ability to sit and function

First-Line Options

  • Paracetamol
  • NSAIDs

Second-Line Options

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

👉 Used to support rehabilitation, not as a long-term solution.


5. Injection Options (When Needed)

If symptoms persist:

  • Epidural steroid injections
  • Selective nerve root blocks

👉 These aim to:

  • Reduce inflammation
  • Relieve nerve irritation
  • Enable rehabilitation

6. When Is Surgery Considered?

Surgery may be considered if:

  • There is significant nerve compression
  • Symptoms persist despite conservative care
  • There is progressive neurological deficit

At The Pain Relief Clinic:

  • Diagnosis and initial management are provided
  • Referral to spine specialists is arranged when needed
  • Rehabilitation is coordinated before and after intervention

7. Integrated, Team-Based Care

At The Pain Relief Clinic:

  • Care is led by Dr. Terence Tan, a licensed medical doctor (SMC) with over 20 years of experience
  • Working closely with MOH AHPC-licensed physiotherapists

Care includes:

  • Diagnosis
  • Progressive rehabilitation
  • Pain science education
  • Nerve-sensitive movement strategies
  • Medical support when needed

Recovery focuses on restoring function, tolerance, and confidence in sitting.


8. When Should You Seek Further Assessment?

You should consider evaluation if:

  • Sitting pain persists or worsens
  • Pain radiates down the leg
  • There is numbness or weakness
  • Sitting tolerance is very limited
  • You are unsure of the cause

Final Takeaway

Sciatica that worsens with sitting is common—and often manageable.

A structured approach includes:

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

👉 Modern MSK care focuses on restoring tolerance, movement, and function—not just avoiding pain triggers.


FAQ

Q1: Why is sciatica worse when sitting?
Sitting increases disc pressure and nerve irritation.

Q2: Should I avoid sitting completely?
No—gradual exposure is more effective than avoidance.

Q3: Is this a slipped disc?
It can be, but other factors like nerve sensitivity also play a role.

Q4: Can physiotherapy help?
Yes, especially for nerve mobility and improving sitting tolerance.