70) Facet Joint Injuries: How Physiotherapy Heals Your Spine Naturally

  • Facet Joint
  • September 24, 2025
HomeUncategorized70) Facet Joint Injuries: How Physiotherapy Heals Your Spine Naturally

Facet joint injuries occur when the small joints between vertebrae become irritated, damaged or stiff, causing pain, limited movement and sometimes referred pain into other areas. Physiotherapy provides hands-on treatment, posture correction and strengthening to calm inflammation and restore function. Read on to discover how you can recover fully—and fast


What Are Facet Joints & Why They Matter

Facet joints (also called zygapophyseal or “Z-joints”) are pairs of small joints at the back of each vertebra. They help your spine move (twist, flex, extend) and stabilise it so the vertebrae don’t slide. When they’re happy, you can bend, turn your neck or back without pain. When injured, though, they can be a major source of agony.


What Causes a Facet Joint Injury

Facet joint injuries stem from a variety of causes:


Symptoms You Might Notice

If a facet joint is injured, you may experience:

If your symptoms don’t match up, it could be the disc. Read more HERE


How Physiotherapy Helps: What You Can Expect

Physiotherapy is one of the best non-surgical treatments for facet joint injuries. It works at multiple levels:

  1. Hands-on manual therapy – mobilisations or joint release techniques to reduce stiffness, improve joint glides, relieve pain.
  2. Targeted exercise programs – to strengthen the core and stabiliser muscles of the spine; improve flexibility of surrounding tissues; retrain movement patterns.
  3. Posture education & ergonomic advice – changing how you sit, sleep, lift, work can reduce ongoing stress on facet joints.
  4. Pain relief modalities – heat/cold therapy, taping, possibly soft-tissue massage to reduce inflammation, muscle spasm and improve comfort.
  5. Dry Needling – Some cases require a deeper release of muscle tone and dry needling can help with this
  6. Gradual progression – from gentle movement to more challenging functional activities so that you can return to daily tasks, sports or work.

Evidence & Best Practice


Case Study: Real Patient from Our Clinic

Let me tell you about Dave, who came to our clinic from a surrounding suburb near Frenchs Forest, NSW. Dave is in his mid-40s, works in landscaping, and developed sharp lower back pain that got significantly worse when he twisted or leaning backwards. He also had stiffness first thing in the morning, and occasional referral down into his buttocks.

After assessment, we determined the issue was a lumbar facet joint injury — one side more affected. Our treatment plan included:

Within 4 weeks Dave reported a 70-80% reduction in pain, improved ability to bend and twist with less discomfort, and by 8 weeks he was back doing most of his landscaping tasks with confidence. By week 12, he was almost pain-free doing gym, lifting and daily duties.

This example shows that with the right approach, consistent physiotherapy yields outcomes sooner than many expect.


Treatment Timeline: What to Expect Week by Week

PhaseTypical GoalsWhat Physiotherapy Does
Weeks 1–2 (Acute)Reduce pain and inflammation, protect the joint, reduce spasmRest, gentle manual therapy, pain relief modalities, teaching safe movement, minimising aggravating postures.
Weeks 3–6 (Sub-acute)Restore range of motion, begin gentle strengtheningMore mobility exercises, core/glute/hip control work, gradual loading, more manual therapy to unlock stiff joints.
Weeks 7–12+ (Recovery / Long-term)Return to full activity, prevent recurrenceFunctional exercises, sport/work-specific training, maintenance program, ongoing postural / ergonomic guidance.

Tips You Can Use Today to Help Your Facet Joint


Potential Ideas When Standard Physio Isn’t Enough

If after around 8-12 weeks of good physiotherapy you still have significant pain / disability, your clinician might consider:


Prevention: Keeping Facet Joints Healthy


Strong Hook & Why You Need to Act Now

Neglecting a facet joint injury can lead to chronic stiffness, reduced motion, and persistent pain that limits work, play and daily life. The sooner you get proper assessment and physiotherapy, the faster you reclaim your mobility and reduce risk of recurring flare-ups.


Call to Action

Ready to get relief and restore strength in your spine? Don’t wait for the pain to worsen— give us a call today on 9806 3077 or book online, just CLICK HERE and let’s start your journey to feeling better.

References & Further Reading