Understanding Spinal PRP Injections for Chronic Back Pain

    Considering Spinal PRP injections for low back pain? Learn how platelet-rich plasma works, the conditions it treats, potential effectiveness, and recovery.

    Spine pain from disc degeneration, facet arthritis, and chronic low back conditions is one of the most common reasons people seek regenerative medicine. Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) therapy offers a non-surgical option that targets the biological environment of the spine rather than masking symptoms.
    PRP therapy for spine pain and disc degeneration
    PRP therapy for spine pain and disc degeneration

    What Spine Conditions Does PRP Treat?

    PRP is most commonly applied to intervertebral disc degeneration (discogenic back pain), facet joint osteoarthritis, sacroiliac joint pain, and chronic low back pain unresponsive to conservative care. The disc is avascular, it receives nutrients by diffusion rather than direct blood supply, which is why it heals poorly on its own and why injecting concentrated growth factors directly into or around the disc holds significant promise.

    How PRP Therapy Works for Spine Pain

    Growth factors in PRP, including PDGF, TGF-β, and IGF-1, stimulate disc cell proliferation and matrix synthesis. In facet joints, the same growth factors reduce inflammatory cytokines and may slow cartilage degradation. PRP is typically delivered under fluoroscopic or ultrasound guidance to ensure accurate placement into the target structure.
    Fluoroscopic-guided PRP injection for lumbar disc degeneration
    Fluoroscopic-guided PRP injection for lumbar disc degeneration

    What the Research Shows

    A pilot randomized controlled trial by Akeda et al. (PMID 25308196) found that intradiscal PRP significantly reduced discogenic low back pain scores at 6 months compared to baseline, with no serious adverse events. A systematic review by Navani et al. (PMID 31983422) evaluated PRP for multiple spinal pain generators and concluded that PRP shows meaningful benefit for facet joint pain and discogenic pain, with an acceptable safety profile across studies.

    PRP vs. Epidural Steroid Injections

    Epidural steroid injections (ESIs) are a standard of care for radicular pain but carry risks with repeated use, including adrenal suppression, bone density loss, and potential spinal complications. PRP avoids these systemic effects and, unlike steroids, does not accelerate degenerative changes. For patients seeking a non-steroidal option or those who have had limited relief from ESIs, PRP represents an evidence-based alternative worth discussing with a spine specialist.

    Who Is a Candidate for Spinal PRP?

    Good candidates typically include adults with MRI-confirmed disc degeneration or facet arthritis, persistent axial back pain rather than primarily radicular symptoms, and prior failure of at least 6 weeks of conservative care. Patients with acute surgical emergencies such as cauda equina syndrome or rapidly progressive neurological deficits are not candidates and should seek immediate surgical evaluation. If your primary complaint is hip or buttock pain, our page on sacroiliac joint dysfunction may be more relevant.

    Sources

    Akeda K, et al. Platelet-rich plasma in the management of chronic low back pain: a critical review. Eur Spine J. 2015;25(4):651-659. PMID 25308196. Navani A, et al. Responsible, safe, and effective use of biologics in the management of low back pain. Pain Med. 2020;21(S1):S1-S37. PMID 31983422.
    This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider to determine whether PRP therapy is appropriate for your condition.
    ConditionInjection TargetEvidence LevelTypical ProtocolBest Candidates
    Disc DegenerationIntradiscal injectionModerate (systematic reviews)1–2 injections, 6–8 weeks apartChronic discogenic pain; failed PT/epidurals
    Facet Joint SyndromeIntra-articular facet jointModerate (RCTs)1–2 injectionsChronic facet arthritis; failed cortisone
    SI Joint DysfunctionIntra-articular SI jointModerate (prospective studies)1–2 injectionsChronic SI pain; confirmed on imaging
    Chronic Low Back PainDisc, facet, or paraspinal ligamentsModerate (multiple studies)1–2 injections, targeted by pain sourceMulti-source low back pain; 3+ months
    Piriformis SyndromePiriformis muscle/sciatic nerve regionLimited (case series)1–2 injectionsRefractory piriformis pain; failed PT

    Frequently Asked Questions

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