Low Back Pain Doesn't Have to Run Your Life.
Eight out of ten adults will deal with significant low back pain at some point. If you're reading this, you're probably in the middle of yours. Here's the good news: physical therapy is the single most effective conservative treatment for low back pain, and it works for the vast majority of people.
25+ Clinics Across New England • No Referral Needed • Most Insurance Accepted
Understanding Low Back Pain
Low back pain is the leading cause of disability worldwide, and it’s also one of the most overtreated conditions in medicine. Too many people end up with imaging they didn’t need, medications that mask the problem, or surgery that could have been avoided.
Whether you’re dealing with a herniated disc, sciatica, spinal stenosis, a muscle strain, or the wear and tear of degenerative disc disease, the evidence is overwhelming — structured physical therapy produces better long-term outcomes than almost any other intervention.
Your back is not fragile. It’s strong, adaptable, and built to move. Sometimes it just needs the right plan.
What Your Body Is Telling You
A sharp, shooting pain down your leg — sometimes all the way to your foot — is sciatica, caused by irritation of the sciatic nerve. It can come from a herniated disc, a bone spur, or muscular compression. It feels alarming, but most cases resolve fully with the right PT approach. The key is getting an accurate assessment of where the nerve irritation is actually coming from.
Stiffness and aching that’s worst in the morning or after sitting often points to degenerative changes in the discs or facet joints. This is incredibly common after age 30 and doesn’t mean your spine is falling apart. It means certain structures need more support and better movement patterns, both of which PT delivers.
Pain that came on suddenly — while lifting, bending, or even sneezing — is likely a muscle strain or an acute disc irritation. Your body’s natural response is to guard and tighten everything around the injury. A PT helps you work through that protective response safely so you don’t develop chronic guarding patterns that cause secondary problems.
How Physical Therapy Helps
Low back rehab at Highbar Health is evidence-based, individualized, and designed to get you moving confidently again — not just managing symptoms.
- A thorough movement assessment to identify exactly what's driving your pain — based on how your body actually moves, not MRI findings present in most pain-free adults
- Hands-on treatment including spinal mobilization and soft tissue work to reduce pain quickly and restore range of motion
- A personalized exercise program that builds core stability, hip mobility, and spinal resilience — designed around your life, job, and goals
- Education that changes how you think about your back, because fear of movement is one of the biggest predictors of chronic pain
Common Low Back Conditions We Treat
Herniated Discs
- Disc bulges pressing on spinal nerves — managed with directional preference exercises, manual therapy, and progressive stabilization to reduce symptoms and prevent recurrence.
Sciatica
- Sciatic nerve irritation causing shooting leg pain — treated by identifying the source of compression and using targeted mobilization, nerve glides, and strengthening.
Spinal Stenosis
- Narrowing of the spinal canal causing pain with standing and walking — addressed with flexion-based exercise programs, manual therapy, and activity modification.
Muscle Strains & Degenerative Disc Disease
- Acute strains and age-related disc changes — resolved with movement retraining, core stabilization, and education to build long-term spinal resilience.
When to See a Physical Therapist
If your back pain has lasted more than a few days, if it’s your second or third episode this year, or if you’re starting to avoid things — stop waiting. You don’t need an MRI first. You don’t need a referral.
- Pain lasting more than a few days
- Recurring episodes of back pain
- Shooting pain, numbness, or tingling down your leg
- Avoiding bending, lifting, exercise, or sitting
Build a Back That Doesn't Hold You Back
Enough Googling. Twenty-five clinics across New England are ready for you today. Most insurance accepted, no referral needed.

Common reasons low backs hurt
Low back pain is usually caused by a mix of load, strength, mobility, and how your body moves. Common examples include:
- Muscle strain from lifting, twisting, or a sudden movement
- Long hours sitting or standing (stiffness that builds through the day)
- Pain or tingling that travels into the hip, leg, or foot (often called sciatica)
- Disc irritation (often hurts with bending forward or sitting)
- Joint stiffness or arthritis-related changes
- Post-injury, post-pregnancy, or post-surgery recovery
Want a plan that fits your back and your goals? Find a PT →
Quick answers about low back pain
FAQS
When should I see a PT for low back pain?
If pain has lasted more than a few days, is limiting work or sleep, or keeps coming back, it’s time. Most low back pain improves faster with PT than with rest and waiting.
Should I rest or exercise with low back pain?
Gentle movement almost always wins. A day or two of taking it easy is fine, but more than that usually slows recovery. A PT will show you what’s safe to keep doing.
Do I need an MRI before I start PT?
Usually no. Most low back pain doesn’t need imaging, and scans often show changes that aren’t the actual source of pain. Your PT will tell you if imaging is truly needed.
I have pain shooting down my leg. Is that sciatica?
It could be. When a nerve in your low back gets irritated, you can feel it in your hip, leg, or foot. The good news is most cases settle down with PT — surgery is rarely the first step.
When is imaging actually helpful for low back pain?
When there’s a specific reason — a major injury, signs of nerve damage that’s getting worse, or red-flag symptoms. Otherwise, scans usually don’t change the plan. A PT can screen for this.
What’s the right way to lift so I don’t hurt my back?
Keep the load close, brace your core, hinge at the hips, and use your legs. But more importantly, build a back that’s strong enough for your life — that’s what really protects you.
How long does low back pain usually take to get better?
Most flare-ups improve within a few weeks with the right plan. Long-standing pain can take longer, but steady progress — not perfection — is what we aim for.