Spinal traction is a therapy designed to gently stretch the spine in order to reduce pressure on discs, joints, muscles, and nerves. It is commonly used for neck and low back conditions, especially when pain is related to compression or irritation of spinal structures.
Some people experience significant relief with traction, while others may notice only mild or temporary improvement. Results often depend on the underlying cause of the pain.
What Is Spinal Traction?
Spinal traction uses a pulling force to create separation between the vertebrae of the spine.
The goals are to:
- Reduce pressure on spinal discs
- Decrease nerve compression
- Improve mobility
- Relax tight muscles
- Reduce joint stress
- Improve circulation to spinal tissues
Traction may be performed manually by a clinician or mechanically using specialized tables or devices.
Types of Spinal Traction
Cervical Traction (Neck)
Targets the cervical spine and may help:
- Neck pain
- Pinched nerves
- Arm numbness or tingling
- Cervical disc issues
- Tension headaches
Lumbar Traction (Low Back)
Targets the lumbar spine and may help:
- Low back pain
- Sciatica
- Disc herniations
- Nerve compression
- Leg pain or numbness
- Degenerative disc problems
Mechanical Spinal Decompression
A more advanced form of computerized traction that uses programmed pull-and-relax cycles to target spinal discs and nerves.
How Traction May Help Pain
Reducing Nerve Pressure
When discs bulge or herniate, they can compress nearby nerves.
Traction may temporarily create more space around the nerve roots and reduce irritation.
Decreasing Disc Pressure
Gentle distraction forces may reduce pressure inside spinal discs and improve nutrient exchange.
Relaxing Muscles
Traction can reduce muscle guarding and spasms around injured spinal segments.
Improving Mobility
Stiff joints and restricted spinal motion may improve with gentle stretching forces.
Conditions That May Respond to Traction
Spinal traction may help:
- Disc herniations
- Disc bulges
- Sciatica
- Pinched nerves
- Cervical radiculopathy
- Degenerative disc disease
- Foraminal stenosis
- Muscle spasms
- Certain types of neck pain
- Chronic low back pain
Symptoms That May Improve
Some patients report improvement in:
- Radiating arm or leg pain
- Tingling
- Numbness
- Muscle tightness
- Reduced flexibility
- Pressure sensations
- Difficulty standing or walking
What Research Shows
Research on spinal traction is mixed.
Some studies suggest traction may help certain patients with:
- Lumbar disc herniations
- Radiculopathy
- Nerve-related pain
especially when combined with:
- Exercise therapy
- Chiropractic care
- Physical therapy
- Core strengthening
However:
- Not everyone responds
- Benefits may be temporary in some cases
- Evidence quality varies
Traction tends to work best when symptoms are related to mechanical compression of nerves or discs.
When Traction May NOT Help
Traction is usually less effective for:
- Severe arthritis
- Fractures
- Spinal instability
- Advanced spinal degeneration
- Non-mechanical pain conditions
- Some chronic pain syndromes
When Traction Should Be Avoided
Traction may not be appropriate for people with:
- Severe osteoporosis
- Spinal fractures
- Spinal infections
- Certain cancers
- Severe instability
- Aortic aneurysm
- Acute trauma
- Cauda equina syndrome
Potential Side Effects
Most side effects are mild but can include:
- Temporary soreness
- Muscle spasms
- Increased symptoms in some patients
- Dizziness after cervical traction
Treatment should be supervised by a qualified healthcare provider.
Bottom Line
Spinal traction may help pain caused by:
- Disc herniations
- Pinched nerves
- Sciatica
- Cervical or lumbar nerve compression
- Muscle tightness and joint restriction
It often works best as part of a broader rehabilitation program that includes:
- Stretching
- Strengthening
- Chiropractic care
- Physical therapy
- Postural correction
If you’d like, I can also provide:
- Spinal traction vs spinal decompression
- Cervical traction exercises at home
- Best stretches for sciatica
- How traction helps disc herniations
- Who is a good candidate for decompression therapy
- Risks and benefits of spinal decompression tables
