Lower-Back Pain Specialists in Dallas
Why your back hurts (and how we find it fast)
Muscle strain, facet joint pain, and herniated discs can feel identical. Our exam plus review of your MRI/X-rays (and ordering new imaging when appropriate) identifies the true pain generator. When part of your plan, we perform precise fluoroscopy-guided injections and coordinate rehab so relief starts quickly.
Dull ache across
the beltline
Sharp pain with
bending or
lifting
Morning
stiffness that
eases after
moving
Spasm into the
hip or buttock
Pain shooting
down one leg
(sciatica)
Why Dallas Spine?
Board-certified spine & pain physicians
Same-/next-day access across seven DFW locations
Fluoroscopy-guided epidural & facet procedures
Integrated care: rehab + interventional
Clear plan at the first visit—no runaround
Request Your Same-Day Lower Back Pain Evaluation
Don’t wait in pain — our expert spine specialists are available for same-day evaluations.
If pain shoots down the leg, follows a crash or heavy lift, or lasts > 7 days, book a same- or next-day evaluation. Red flags (leg weakness, fever, bladder/bowel changes) require urgent care. See Sciatica and Herniated Disc pages
Not usually. We review any MRI/X-rays you bring and order new imaging only when results will change treatment or if red-flag signs are present. Learn about Herniated Disc and our Lumbar Stenosis page.
Early Physical Therapy & Rehab, Class IV Laser Therapy, and fluoroscopy-guided epidural or facet injections can calm pain and restore motion quickly. Explore Epidural Injections, Facet/RF, and Laser Therapy.
When performed with fluoroscopy guidance, complications are rare. We use sterile technique, contrast confirmation, and dose limits. Read our Epidural Steroid Injection page.
Most desk work resumes immediately; light activity within days. After injections, easy walking is fine the same day—progress as advised by your clinician. See Physical Therapy & Rehab.
Most patients improve without surgery. We consider microdiscectomy or decompression for severe nerve compression, progressive weakness, or failed conservative care. Review Lumbar Laminectomy/Decompression.