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Spinal pain can originate from various causes, including lumbar and cervical disc herniations, facet joint pain, sacroiliac joint dysfunction, and spinal osteoarthritis. Furthermore, patients who develop adhesions in their nerve canals after lumbar disc surgery and spinal canal stenosis, commonly seen in older age, are also significant sources of pain. A disc herniation occurs when the disc between the vertebrae ruptures. This rupture can lead to both localized pain originating from the disc itself and radiating pain caused by a compressed nerve root. Nerve root compression-related pain typically spreads down the leg, even to the toes, and can be more severe than the back pain. Spinal canal stenosis (spinal stenosis), on the other hand, usually follows a chronic course. Patients typically complain of cramp-like pain that increases with walking, radiating into both legs. Symptoms subside with rest but reappear when walking resumes. This condition is known as neurogenic claudication. Spinal needle techniques provide a rapid and effective intervention for managing such pain.