
Lower back pain is one of the most common reasons people end up in a doctor’s office. It’s also one of the most misunderstood. Many patients worry that pain automatically means surgery, while others assume surgery should be the first solution when pain doesn’t go away quickly.
In reality, most back pain never needs surgery. And when surgery is necessary, the reasons are usually very specific.
This is where clarity matters.
Dr. Evan Trapana spends a lot of time helping patients understand whether their pain is something that will settle on its own—or whether there’s a structural issue that actually needs surgical attention. Knowing the difference can save patients months (or years) of frustration.
Here’s the part that surprises many patients:
Most lower back pain is self-limiting.
That means it improves over time with:
Muscle strains, ligament irritation, and mild disc issues often look scary on imaging but calm down without surgery.
Pain alone is not a reason for spine surgery.
Dr. Trapana often sees patients who’ve been told, “Your MRI looks bad,” but functionally, they don’t need an operation.
Back pain is usually non-surgical when:
These cases are frustrating—but surgery rarely helps them and can sometimes make things worse.
Surgery is typically considered when pain isn’t just pain anymore.
It becomes structural.
That usually means one or more of the following:
At that point, surgery isn’t about comfort—it’s about preventing permanent damage.
One of the biggest misconceptions patients have is that MRI findings automatically dictate treatment.
They don’t.
Disc bulges, degenerative changes, and arthritis show up on scans for people with no pain at all. Dr. Trapana looks at imaging only in the context of symptoms, exam findings, and function.
A scan is a tool—not a verdict.
When surgery is recommended, it’s not because the spine “looks bad.” It’s because something specific needs correction, such as:
The goal isn’t just pain relief.
It’s restoring function and protecting nerves.
Waiting too long can be just as harmful as operating too early.
Chronic nerve compression can lead to:
This is why Dr. Trapana focuses heavily on timing, not just diagnosis.
A real surgical evaluation should never feel rushed.
It typically includes:
Sometimes the best answer is reassurance. Sometimes it’s surgery. Patients deserve to know which one applies to them.
No. Many people live with chronic back pain that is managed non-surgically.
Not necessarily. Treatment failure depends on why it didn’t work and what symptoms remain.
Often, yes. Persistent leg pain can indicate nerve compression.
In certain cases, yes—especially when weakness or nerve dysfunction is present.
Absolutely. Surgery should feel like a clear decision, not a rushed one.
Spine surgery is not for “bad backs.”
It’s for specific structural problems that don’t improve—and shouldn’t be ignored.
The most important step isn’t choosing surgery or avoiding it.
It’s understanding why one path makes sense over the other.
That’s what a proper spine consultation is for.
If lower back pain is affecting your life and you’re unsure whether surgery is truly necessary, a focused evaluation can bring clarity.
A consultation helps determine:
Getting the right answer matters more than getting a fast one.