The VerdictHIGH CONVICTIONVerdict Score 78

Your back joints hurt because your trunk muscles stopped controlling the movement — fix the control, fix the pain.

Lie on your back with knees bent. Gently flatten your lower back into the floor by tilting your pelvis. Hold 5 seconds, then relax. Do 10 slow reps. That's your first motor control exercise — teaching your trunk muscles to control the position of your spine.

  1. Here's what's really happening: The small joints at the back of your spine are being overloaded because your deep trunk muscles aren't doing their job — they've gone slack, so the joints take all the force when you bend or twist.
  2. What most people get wrong: Getting a scan. Wear-and-tear changes show up on MRI in almost 100% of adults over 60 — even those with zero pain. A scan will almost certainly show "damage" that has nothing to do with your symptoms.
  3. Start here: Pelvic tilts, bird-dogs, and side planks — done daily for 4-6 weeks. These retrain the muscles that are supposed to protect those joints. Most people feel a real difference by week 6.

Think of your spine like a flagpole held up by guy wires. The facet joints are the hinges at each section of the pole. When the guy wires (your trunk muscles) go slack, the hinges take all the stress every time the wind blows. The pain isn't from the hinges being broken — it's from the hinges doing a job they were never designed to do alone. Tighten the wires, and the hinges go quiet.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Lumbar Facet Joint Pain

Lumbar Spine — Zygapophysial Joint Pain

HIGH CONVICTION RED TRIAGE

Lie on your back with knees bent. Gently flatten your lower back into the floor by tilting your pelvis. Hold 5 seconds, relax. Do 10 slow reps.

This pelvic tilt is the foundation of motor control training — it teaches your trunk muscles to control spinal position, taking load off the irritated joints.

Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.

Your back joints hurt because your trunk muscles stopped controlling the movement — fix the control, fix the pain.

Think of your spine like a flagpole held up by guy wires. The facet joints are the hinges at each section of the pole. When the guy wires (your trunk muscles) go slack, the hinges take all the stress every time the wind blows. The pain isn't from the hinges being broken — it's from the hinges doing a job they were never designed to do alone. Tighten the wires, and the hinges go quiet.

  1. Here's what's really happening: The small joints at the back of your spine are being overloaded because your deep trunk muscles aren't doing their job — they've gone slack, so the joints take all the force when you bend or twist.
  2. What most people get wrong: Getting a scan. Wear-and-tear changes show up on MRI in almost 100% of adults over 60 — even those with zero pain. A scan will almost certainly show "damage" that has nothing to do with your symptoms.
  3. Start here: Pelvic tilts, bird-dogs, and side planks — done daily for 4-6 weeks. These retrain the muscles that protect those joints. Most people feel a real difference by week 6.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

What Works

Tier 1 — Strong Evidence

Motor Control + Progressive Resistance Training STRONG

Specific extension-control motor learning, trunk strengthening, and aerobic training. JOSPT 2021 strongly recommends this as first-line for chronic low back pain.

Timeline: clinical benefit within 8-13 weeks of consistent loading. Motor control: 20-30 reps, low load, cognitive focus, 3-4x/day. Resistance: 3x10-15 for hip/trunk, 2-3x/week. Endurance: side planks up to 60-90s, 5-6x/week.

Radiofrequency Ablation (for chronic confirmed cases) STRONG

For patients who have failed 3+ months of structured conservative care, confirmed via dual medial branch blocks with >80% relief. ASRA 2020 Level II evidence.

Timeline: relief onset 2-4 weeks; duration 6-12 months (nerve regeneration typical). Must be paired with structured rehabilitation during the pain-free window.

See full treatment hierarchy

Tier 2 — Moderate Evidence

Therapeutic Medial Branch Blocks MODERATE

Local anesthetic with or without steroid to the medial branches. Average 19 weeks relief per episode. Facilitates a rehabilitation window when pain is the primary barrier.

Manual Therapy — Mulligan SNAGs + Maitland PA Glides MODERATE

Mobilization with movement to restore pain-free lumbar motion. RCTs show short-term improvements in pain and disability. Dosing: 3 sets of 6 reps, 3 sessions/week for 4-8 weeks. Best as adjunct to active rehabilitation.

Tier 3 — Emerging Evidence

Isolated Lumbar Extension Training (MedX) EMERGING

High-intensity, single-set-to-failure isolated lumbar extension. 1 set to failure, 1x/week for 12 weeks. Limited RCTs but promising for chronic lumbar pain. Requires specialized equipment.

What Doesn't Work

  • Intra-articular facet injections — High technical failure rate, limited ability to predict RFA success. ASRA 2020 and ASIPP 2020 recommend against as primary tool.
  • Prolonged bed rest — Causes fatty infiltration and wasting of the multifidus — the very muscles that protect the facet joints. Every major guideline recommends against.
  • Lumbar braces and corsets — JOSPT 2021 strongly recommends against. Transient comfort at the cost of long-term trunk muscle capacity.
  • Routine imaging for diagnosis — Facet degeneration on MRI is near-universal in older adults regardless of pain. Imaging without red flags drives fear and overtreatment.

Exercise Prescription

Exercise prescription for lumbar facet joint rehabilitation

Pelvic Tilts

3 x 10 | Daily (AM + PM)

Lie on your back, knees bent. Flatten your lower back into the floor. Hold 5 seconds, relax. Zero pain — this is a control exercise.

Bird-Dog

3 x 8 each side | Daily

On hands and knees, extend opposite arm and leg. Keep back flat — imagine balancing a cup of water. Hold 5-10 seconds.

Side Plank

3 x hold (30-60s) | 5-6x/week

On your side, forearm down, hips lifted. Start on knees if needed. Build to 60 seconds each side with good form.

Glute Bridge

3 x 12 | 3x/week

Lie on your back, push through heels to lift hips. Squeeze glutes at top, hold 3 seconds. Feel it in glutes, not lower back.

Red Flags

When to Seek Immediate Medical Attention

  • EMERGENCY: Bilateral leg weakness + numbness in the saddle area (inner thighs, buttocks) + difficulty with bladder or bowel control = possible cauda equina syndrome. Go to the emergency room immediately.
  • URGENT: Fever + worsening unrelenting pain + history of spinal injections, immune suppression, or IV drug use = possible spinal infection. Urgent medical review.
  • URGENT: History of cancer + unexplained weight loss + night pain that nothing relieves = possible spinal malignancy. Urgent GP referral for imaging.
  • Sudden onset of severe extension pain in a young athlete (gymnastics, cricket, weightlifting) = possible pars stress fracture. GP referral for imaging.
  • Progressive worsening of leg weakness, spreading numbness, or gait disturbance = progressive neurological deficit. Urgent specialist referral.

Return to Training

Timeline: Acute cases typically resolve in 2-4 weeks. Full return to heavy training: 8-12 weeks. If not progressing by 12 weeks, referral for diagnostic medial branch blocks is indicated.

What's Actually Going On

Lumbar facet joint anatomy and pain mechanism

The lumbar facet joints (zygapophysial joints) are small synovial joints at the back of each vertebra from L1 to L5. They guide spinal motion — restricting excessive rotation and forward shear — while sharing compressive loads with the intervertebral discs.

Pain arises when the joint capsule gets stretched, inflamed, or when small folds inside the joint get pinched. This typically happens because the deep stabilizing muscles (especially the multifidus) weaken or lose their timing. Without that muscular control, the joints absorb forces they were never designed to handle alone — particularly during extension and rotation.

The capsule is innervated by the medial branches of the dorsal rami from the same level and the level above. This dual nerve supply is why medial branch blocks are the most reliable diagnostic tool — and why radiofrequency ablation targets those specific nerves.

The Imaging Paradox

Degenerative changes in the facet joints (cartilage loss, bone spurs, capsular thickening) are present in almost everyone over 60 — including people with zero pain. This means an MRI showing "facet arthropathy" tells you almost nothing about whether the facet is actually causing your symptoms. The structural changes are near-universal; the pain is not.

How to Identify It

Clinical assessment of lumbar facet joint pain

Key Symptoms

Diagnostic Tests

Kemp's Test (Extension-Rotation) Sn: 34-100% | Sp: 47-67%

Combined extension + ipsilateral lateral flexion + rotation. A negative test has moderate value for ruling out the facet — but a positive test can't confirm it. Also provokes foraminal stenosis, so false positives are common.

Paraspinal Palpation Sn: 95% | Sp: 25%

Firm pressure over the articular pillars L4-S1. Very sensitive (catches most cases) but not specific (lots of false positives from other causes of paraspinal tenderness).

Revel's Criteria (Cluster) Sn: 11-17% | Sp: 91-93%

Age >65, pain relieved by lying down, no worsening with cough/flexion. Very specific when all criteria are positive — but misses 83-89% of cases.

Diagnostic Gold Standard: Dual Medial Branch Blocks

The only way to confirm the facet as the pain source with reasonable certainty. Requires >80% concordant pain relief on two separate occasions. Even this has a 17-44% false-positive rate from placebo response and anesthetic spread.

The Debate

Imaging for Diagnosis

Legacy practice, pre-2007

Routine X-rays and MRI to diagnose facet arthropathy and guide treatment decisions.

vs

ACP 2007; ASRA 2020

Imaging discouraged. Degenerative facet findings are present in almost 100% of adults over 60 — including those with no pain.

Follow current evidence: image only to rule out red flags, not to confirm facet pain. MRI findings of degeneration do not confirm the facet as the pain source.

Diagnostic Injections

Early 2000s protocols

Intra-articular facet injections as the primary diagnostic tool.

vs

ASRA 2020

Medial branch blocks are preferred. IA injections have high technical failure rates and inflate false-positive responses.

Dual medial branch blocks with >80% relief are the current diagnostic standard. IA injections often rupture the joint capsule and spread to adjacent structures.

Rest vs Active Rehabilitation

Older empirical models

Prescribed lumbar corsets, belts, and rest for low back pain.

vs

JOSPT 2021; Danish Health Authority 2018

Strong recommendation against lumbar supports. Strong recommendation for active trunk strengthening and motor control.

Prolonged rest causes the very muscle wasting (multifidus atrophy) that created the problem. Every major guideline now recommends active loading as first-line treatment.

Honest Limitations

Exercise Adherence in the Real World

The research: Clinical trials use highly supervised settings with rigorous dosing (3-4 times daily, or supervised-to-failure training).

The gap: Only 32% of exercise trials even detail their home exercise program. Patient adherence drops dramatically when complex motor-learning tasks are assigned without immediate feedback.

The adjustment: Keep home exercises to 2-3 simple movements with external constraints (wall contact, dowel rod on back) to prevent substitution patterns.

Diagnostic Uncertainty

The research: Even medial branch blocks — the best diagnostic tool available — have a false-positive rate of 17-44%.

The gap: Community physical therapists rely on subjective examination. A significant proportion of "facet syndrome" diagnoses are actually misdiagnosed disc or muscle pain.

The adjustment: Treat the movement impairment (extension-control deficit), not the anatomical label. If the treatment works, the specific pain generator becomes irrelevant.

Patient Expectations vs RFA Reality

The research: Radiofrequency ablation provides 6-12 months of relief, but the targeted nerves typically regenerate.

The gap: Patients expect permanent cures. If the pain-free window isn't used for aggressive muscle rehabilitation, recurrence is the natural history.

The adjustment: Frame RFA as a window for rehabilitation, not a standalone fix. Every RFA patient should have a structured 12-week loading program ready.

The Nuance

Clinical complexity of lumbar facet joint pain diagnosis

No single test can confirm facet joint pain. The clinical examination is notoriously unreliable — Kemp's test specificity tops out at 67%. The current reference standard (dual medial branch blocks) has its own false-positive rate of 17-44%. This means a significant number of people treated for "facet pain" actually have a different pain source.

The practical upside: treating the movement impairment (extension-control deficit) works regardless of the anatomical diagnosis. If motor control training succeeds, pinpointing the exact pain generator becomes clinically irrelevant.

Surgery vs Conservative

Fusion surgery for isolated facet pain is rarely supported by evidence and carries significant irreversibility. RFA is the primary interventional option, but nerves regenerate in 6-12 months.

The best long-term outcomes combine RFA with aggressive structured rehabilitation during the pain-free window. Conservative success rate: 60-70% of chronic cases improve with multimodal physical therapy. RFA success: 60-80% of confirmed patients achieve >50% pain reduction for 6-12 months.

Sources

JOSPT 2021 — Clinical Practice Guidelines for Low Back Pain. Strong recommendation for exercise and motor control training.
ASRA/ASIPP 2020 — Evidence-based guidelines for facet joint interventions. Level II evidence for RFA; recommend against IA injections as primary tool.
O'Sullivan 2005 — Motor control impairment classification. Extension-control deficit identification and specific exercise targeting.
Manchikanti et al. 2020 — Systematic review of therapeutic medial branch blocks. Level II evidence for intermediate-term relief (~19 weeks).
McGill 2015 — Endurance stabilizer protocols (side plank, bird-dog) for lumbar spine rehabilitation.
Mulligan/Hidalgo et al. — SNAGs for lumbar spine: RCTs showing short-term VAS and ODI improvements. 3 sets of 6 reps protocol.
HIGH CONVICTION

What would change this: A well-designed RCT (N>200) specifically comparing progressive resistance training vs motor control vs RFA in patients with MBB-confirmed facetogenic pain. Currently, all exercise evidence is extrapolated from non-specific LBP cohorts — no trial has isolated confirmed facet pain patients.

DM me on Instagram for guidance.

Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

78 Mixed evidence
80–100Strong evidence
60–79Mixed but supportive ◀
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

Treatment Priority — Non-Specific Low Back Pain

Evidence-based treatment order for uncomplicated cases. Start at the top — most people don't need the bottom.

Red flags, progressive weakness, or bowel/bladder changes require immediate medical assessment and change this pathway.

1st Line
Education & Reassurance
Understanding that LBP is common and rarely dangerous reduces fear-avoidance and improves outcomes
Graded Movement & Loading
The single strongest driver of recovery — movement within tolerance, progressive loading
Staying Active (Avoiding Bed Rest)
Bed rest worsens outcomes in every study. Staying active beats rest, even when uncomfortable
2nd Line
Structured Exercise Programs (Home-Based)
If plateau at 4-6 weeks with general activity. Motor control, McKenzie, or general strengthening
Manual Therapy
Short-term pain relief as a bridge to exercise, not a standalone treatment
Adjunct
Heat Therapy
Symptom relief to enable movement — not a treatment in itself
Walking Program
Low-cost, accessible, improves outcomes as supplement to structured exercise
Limited Evidence
TENS
Minimal evidence for meaningful benefit beyond placebo
Passive Modalities (Ultrasound, Laser)
Short-term comfort at best, no lasting change. Not recommended in guidelines
Imaging Without Red Flags
Often counterproductive — incidental findings increase fear-avoidance and worsen outcomes

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The Verdict is built by the same team behind Precision Metrics — a physique and health coaching practice with 300+ clients coached. Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT and Luke Holbrook lead the coaching.

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