Assessment-led care for sciatica symptoms—serving Richmond Hill and North York, including leg pain, tingling, or numbness traveling from the back or buttock. Book your nearest clinic and start a plan with clear milestones for sitting, walking, and function.

Pattern-matched care: calm symptoms → restore movement → return to life.

What we help with (Richmond Hill & North York)

Common reasons people book for sciatica pain

  • Leg pain that travels below the buttock (with or without low back pain)

  • Tingling, numbness, or “pins and needles” into the thigh, calf, or foot

  • Pain that worsens with sitting, driving, bending, or certain positions

  • Flare-ups after lifting, sudden activity spikes, or prolonged sitting

  • “Electric” or burning pain patterns (possible nerve irritation) — needs assessment

  • Weakness or reduced tolerance for walking/standing (screened carefully)

  • Return-to-work and return-to-exercise planning after sciatica episodes

  • Recurring episodes where you’re unsure what movements are safe

Sciatica Pain treatments

Is your sciatica pain urgent?

Seek urgent medical attention if you have sciatica along with any of the following:

  • Loss of bowel or bladder control, or numbness in the saddle/groin area.
  • Severe or progressive weakness in your leg or foot (e.g., foot drop where you can’t lift your toes).
  • Symptoms following significant trauma, like a fall or car accident.
  • Severe, unrelenting pain that doesn’t change with any position or rest.
  • Fever, chills, or unexplained weight loss alongside back and leg pain.

Key Takeaways

  • Most sciatica improves with a structured assessment → nerve symptom management → core/hip strengthening → prevention plan.

  • Sciatica is a symptom, not a diagnosis. Common causes include a herniated disc, spinal stenosis, piriformis syndrome, or joint dysfunction.

  • You don’t always need an MRI right away—a thorough clinical exam screens for red flags and can effectively guide initial treatment.

  • The most effective recovery combines hands-on treatment to reduce irritation + specific nerve mobility exercises + targeted strengthening to prevent recurrence.

How we treat sciatica pain

Most plans follow the same structure; the details depend on what’s causing your nerve irritation.

Physiotherapy for sciatica focuses on diagnosing the source of nerve compression or irritation. Treatment combines manual therapy, specific nerve gliding exercises, and a progressive core/glute strengthening program to relieve pressure and build lasting resilience.
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Chiropractic care may help when joint dysfunction or restriction in the lower spine or pelvis is contributing to sciatic nerve irritation. Gentle adjustments aim to improve spinal mobility and reduce inflammation around the nerve roots, often paired with stabilizing exercises.
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Massage therapy (RMT) targets deep muscle tension in the piriformis, glutes, and lower back that can compress or mimic sciatic pain. It helps reduce guarding and spasm, easing acute pain to better participate in active rehab.
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Shockwave therapy may be used in select cases to calm stubborn myofascial pain around the hip/glute region that can contribute to sciatica-like discomfort.
When appropriate, we combine it with mobility work and progressive strengthening to improve tolerance and reduce flare-ups.
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Acupuncture can help modulate the sharp, radiating pain signals of sciatica and reduce local inflammation. It’s often integrated into a broader plan to make movement and prescribed exercises more comfortable.
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What to Expect at Your First Visit

Your first appointment is designed to give you clarity on the cause of your leg pain and start an effective plan.

1) We listen and clarify your goals

We’ll review when your sciatica started, what triggers it (sitting, bending, walking), and what you need to get back to—work, driving, exercise, or daily tasks without pain.

2) We assess movement, nerve function, and strength

We assess movement, tolerance to key positions (sitting, bending, walking), and screen for nerve involvement when appropriate. Based on what we find, we explain your likely pattern and outline the safest, most effective next steps.

3) You get a clear working diagnosis and plan

We’ll explain the most likely source of your sciatica (e.g., disc-related, joint-related, muscular) and what the recovery pathway looks like for your specific pattern.

4) You leave with next steps and home actions

You’ll receive immediate, practical advice on pain-reducing postures, safe movements, and initial gentle exercises (like nerve glides) to start right away.

5) Follow-up plan (measurable progress)

We’ll recommend a follow-up schedule to progress your rehab, re-check nerve function, and adjust your plan until you’re independently strong and confident.

Common causes and patterns of sciatica pain

Sciatica pain isn’t one single condition. Your treatment works best when it matches the pattern you’re experiencing.

  • Sciatica from a Herniated/Bulging Disc: The most common cause. Inner disc material presses on a spinal nerve root, causing sharp, shooting pain down the leg, often with specific movements.

  • Piriformis Syndrome: The sciatic nerve gets irritated or compressed as it passes under (or through) the piriformis muscle in the buttock. Pain is often deep in the buttock and can mimic disc-related sciatica.

  • Sciatica from Spinal Stenosis: A narrowing of the spinal canal that puts pressure on nerves. Pain often comes on with walking or standing and is relieved by sitting or bending forward (shopping cart sign).

  • Referred Leg Pain from Joint Dysfunction: Stiff or irritated joints in the lower back (facet joints) or pelvis (SI joints) can refer pain into the leg, mimicking true nerve root sciatica. Assessment is key to differentiate.

  • Post-Injury or Post-Surgical Sciatica: Nerve pain that can develop after a trauma like a fall or accident, or as part of the healing process following back surgery.

  • If pain stays in the low back without leg symptoms: see Back Pain Treatment

Self-care basics between visits

Most sciatica pain improves with a mix of gentle movement, reducing aggravators temporarily, and gradually rebuilding tolerance. The goal isn’t perfect posture—it’s comfortable movement and steady progress.

What to do today

  • Find a pain-reducing position: Often lying on your back with knees bent and calves propped on a chair, or on your side with knees bent and a pillow between them.

  • Try gentle nerve gliding: Perform safe, gentle movements like a seated sciatic nerve glide only if it doesn’t increase leg pain.

  • Use short, frequent walks: Brief walks on level ground can help, but avoid long distances that aggravate symptoms.

  • Apply heat or ice strategically: Use a heat pack on your lower back/buttock for muscle tightness. Use an ice pack on areas of sharp, burning pain for 15 minutes.

What to avoid during a flare

  • Avoid prolonged sitting, especially on soft couches or in low chairs.
  • Avoid heavy lifting, bending, and twisting movements.
  • Avoid aggressive stretching into painful ranges, like pulling your knee to your chest if it shoots pain down your leg.
  • Stop any exercise that causes sharp, shooting pain or numbness to travel further down your leg.

When to stop self-care and seek assessment

If self-care isn’t helping after a few days, your weakness/numbness is increasing, or you can’t find a comfortable position to sleep, book an assessment. If you develop any urgent red flags (see above), seek immediate medical care.

Do you need an X-ray or MRI?

Not always. For most first-time sciatica without red flags, a clinical exam is sufficient to start effective treatment. Imaging is typically considered if symptoms are severe, not improving after 4-6 weeks of conservative care, or if red flags are present. We will guide you on the appropriate steps if imaging is needed.

How long does it take to improve?

Your clinician will give you a personalized timeline based on your assessment findings.

  • Acute flare-up (0-4 weeks): Focus is on pain reduction, nerve calming, and restoring basic movement.
  • Sub-acute recovery (4-12 weeks): Building core/hip strength, improving nerve mobility, and gradual return to activities.
  • Chronic/persistent sciatica (12+ weeks): Requires more comprehensive rehab to address underlying strength deficits and movement patterns.

Our Locations

Visit us in Richmond Hill

On-site parking

On-site parking is available. If you’d like the easiest entrance/parking route, call us and we’ll guide you.

Direct Billing & Insurance

Direct billing may be available for many extended health plans. Coverage varies by insurer and plan—if direct billing isn’t available, we provide receipts for reimbursement.

Why Choose Toronto Wellness & Physio Center for Sciatica Pain Treatment?

Nerve vs referred pain clarity
We assess whether symptoms fit true nerve irritation or referred pain from back/hip tissues. Your plan matches the pattern—so you don’t waste time on the wrong approach.

Safety-first screening
We check for neurological signs and red flags, and explain when medical review is needed. That keeps your care safe and decision-making clear.

Milestones that matter
We track sitting/driving tolerance, walking comfort, leg symptoms, and functional movements. If progress stalls, we adjust early instead of repeating the same visit.

Rehab-first, lasting results
Long-term improvement usually comes from restoring mobility and rebuilding strength/endurance. You’ll get a realistic home plan that fits your routine and reduces repeat flare-ups.

Return-to-work and activity planning
We help you modify positions and loading so you can stay active without provoking symptoms. Then we progress you back to lifting, sport, and daily life with confidence.

Two locations, one standard of care
Same structured approach in Richmond Hill and North York.
Choose the clinic that fits your commute—your care plan stays consistent.

Sciatica Pain Treatment FAQ

Find quick answers about causes, recovery timelines, imaging, exercise, sleep, and when to seek medical care.

Yes—sciatica care is available at both locations. You can book the clinic that’s most convenient and follow the same structured plan.

“Sciatica” is a common term for symptoms that travel from the back/buttock into the leg, often involving nerve irritation. Not all leg pain is sciatica—assessment helps confirm the pattern.

Nerve-related pain often travels in a clearer pathway, may include tingling/numbness, and can change with certain positions. Referred muscle/joint pain can mimic it—your exam helps separate these.

Often yes—many people do better with short, frequent walks within tolerance. We’ll guide what’s safe for your pattern and how to progress without flaring symptoms.

Complete rest usually isn’t ideal. Most cases improve with modified movement and a plan to gradually rebuild tolerance, unless red flags are present.

Not always. Imaging is usually considered if there are red flags, significant trauma, progressive weakness, or if symptoms aren’t improving as expected.

Timelines vary. Many people improve steadily over weeks with the right load management and rehab progressions, especially once triggers like sitting/driving are addressed.

Seek urgent medical care for new or worsening leg weakness, new bladder/bowel control issues, saddle/groin numbness, or severe symptoms after trauma.

That’s common. We’ll use position strategies, mobility work, and graded exposure to improve sitting tolerance instead of avoiding it forever.

Yes. We focus on building strength/endurance, improving tolerance for your triggers, and giving you a repeatable plan for early flare management.

Book Sciatica Pain Treatment Appointment!

Book your appointment using the link below. Our team will assess your symptoms and create a personalized treatment plan to help reduce pain, restore movement, and prevent flare-ups.