Do Disc Herniations Heal? The Natural History Research
What MRI follow-up studies tell us about spontaneous disc resorption and why most people don't need surgery
The short answer: Disc herniations often heal on their own. Research shows 96% of sequestered fragments, 70% of extrusions, and 41% of protrusions regress on follow-up MRI, without surgery. Larger herniations are actually more likely to resorb than smaller ones. Most resolution happens within 6–12 months. This is why conservative care is the appropriate first-line treatment for most disc herniations without progressive neurological deficit.
When someone gets an MRI showing a disc herniation, the common assumption is that they now have permanent structural damage that will require surgery to fix. This assumption drives anxiety, affects treatment decisions, and sometimes leads to unnecessary interventions. But what does the research actually show about what happens to disc herniations over time?
The answer is both reassuring and well-documented: most disc herniations reduce in size or completely resolve without surgical intervention.
The Evidence for Spontaneous Disc Resorption
Multiple systematic reviews have examined what happens when you follow disc herniations with serial MRI imaging over months to years. The findings are consistent.
A 2010 systematic review published in the American Journal of Neuroradiology analyzed 31 studies with serial MRI follow-up of lumbar disc herniations. The researchers found that larger herniations (disc extrusions and sequestrations) were more likely to regress than smaller herniations (disc protrusions). Sequestered fragments showed the highest rates of complete resorption.
The review found regression occurred in approximately 96% of sequestrations, 70% of extrusions, 41% of protrusions, and 13% of disc bulges. These aren't small changes. We're talking about significant reduction in herniation size or complete disappearance of herniated material.
How Does This Happen?
The mechanism involves your immune system recognizing herniated disc material as foreign tissue (because it normally sits behind the protective outer layer of the disc and isn't exposed to your bloodstream). This triggers an inflammatory response that breaks down and reabsorbs the herniated material.
Larger herniations that breach the posterior longitudinal ligament and contact the epidural space show faster and more complete resorption. This is counterintuitive. You'd think bigger herniations would be worse, but they're actually more likely to resolve because they trigger a stronger immune response.
Timeline for Disc Resorption
Most studies show significant changes occurring between 6-12 months after the initial herniation. Some changes can be seen as early as 2-3 months, but the most dramatic resorption typically happens over the 6-12 month window.
This timeline matters clinically. It means that someone experiencing acute sciatica from a disc herniation might see improvement in symptoms before the disc has fully resorbed, as nerve irritation decreases even while the herniation is still present. But it also means that full structural resolution can take close to a year.
The Disconnect Between Imaging and Symptoms
Here's where things get interesting. Disc resorption on MRI doesn't always correlate perfectly with symptom improvement, and symptom improvement doesn't require complete disc resorption.
Studies have found that clinical improvement (reduction in leg pain, improved function) often precedes or occurs independently from MRI changes. People can get significantly better while the herniation is still visible on imaging. Conversely, some people show complete disc resorption on follow-up MRI but still have residual symptoms.
This reinforces a key principle: imaging findings are just one piece of information. They don't define the clinical picture or predict outcomes as precisely as we'd like.
What About People Without Symptoms?
A famous 1994 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine by Jensen and colleagues scanned 98 people who had never had low back pain or sciatica. They found that 64% had abnormal discs on MRI, 28% had disc protrusions, and 1% had extrusions.
A 2015 systematic review by Brinjikji and colleagues expanded on this, analyzing imaging findings across the lifespan in asymptomatic individuals. They found disc degeneration in 37% of asymptomatic 20-year-olds, increasing to 96% of asymptomatic 80-year-olds. Disc protrusions were present in 29% of 20-year-olds and 43% of 80-year-olds, all without symptoms.
These findings don't mean imaging is useless. They mean that imaging findings must be interpreted in clinical context. A disc herniation on MRI matters if it correlates with the person's symptoms and examination findings. But the same finding in an asymptomatic person is just an incidental observation.
Conservative Care vs Surgery: What the Trials Show
The SPORT trial (Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial), published in multiple papers in JAMA and the Journal of the American Medical Association between 2006-2008, remains the most comprehensive comparison of surgical vs conservative treatment for lumbar disc herniation with radiculopathy.
The trial had both randomized and observational cohorts (since many patients had strong treatment preferences and refused randomization). At 3 months, the surgery group showed faster improvement in pain and function. This makes sense: surgery removes the mechanical compression immediately.
But here's the finding that matters for long-term decision making: at 2 years and 4 years, there were no statistically significant differences in outcomes between the surgery group and the conservative care group. Both groups improved substantially, but the surgery group's early advantage disappeared over time.
This doesn't mean surgery is never right. For people with severe unrelenting pain, progressive neurological deficit, or cauda equina syndrome, surgery can be necessary and appropriate. But for the majority of people with disc herniation and sciatica, conservative care provides similar long-term outcomes while avoiding surgical risks and allowing natural healing processes to work.
What Does "Conservative Care" Mean in These Studies?
Conservative care in these trials wasn't passive. It typically included some combination of:
- Patient education about the condition and expected recovery
- Activity modification during acute phases, with gradual return to normal activities
- Physical therapy or exercise programs
- Manual therapy (manipulation or mobilization)
- Medication for symptom management (NSAIDs, sometimes short-term oral steroids or nerve pain medications)
- Epidural steroid injections in some cases
The key is that conservative care was active management, not just "wait and see." People were engaged in treatment that aimed to reduce pain, maintain function, and support the body's natural healing process.
Clinical Implications
So what does all this research mean for someone who just got an MRI report saying they have a disc herniation?
First, a disc herniation is not a life sentence. Your body has robust mechanisms for healing disc herniations, and larger herniations actually have better resorption rates than smaller ones.
Second, surgery is a choice, not an inevitability. Unless you have progressive motor weakness, cauda equina symptoms, or severe pain that isn't responding to comprehensive conservative care, you have time to try non-surgical approaches. The research shows that most people improve with conservative care, and long-term outcomes are similar whether you have surgery or not.
Third, don't let an MRI report define your identity or limit your future. Plenty of people without symptoms have disc herniations on imaging. Your symptoms matter more than the imaging findings. Focus on function and quality of life, not on making the MRI look perfect.
Fourth, give it time. Most disc resorption happens over 6-12 months. Your symptoms will likely improve before the disc fully resorbs, but structural healing takes time. This doesn't mean doing nothing for a year. It means engaging with active conservative care while understanding that complete resolution is a process, not an event.
When to Consider Surgery
While most disc herniations improve with conservative care, surgery is sometimes necessary:
- Cauda equina syndrome: Loss of bowel/bladder control, saddle anesthesia, bilateral leg weakness. This is a surgical emergency.
- Progressive motor weakness: If foot drop or leg weakness is getting worse despite treatment, surgery may prevent permanent nerve damage.
- Severe unrelenting pain: If pain remains severe and disabling after 6-12 weeks of appropriate conservative care, surgery can provide faster relief.
- Patient preference: Some people choose surgery for faster resolution even when conservative care would likely work. This is a valid choice when made with full information about risks, benefits, and alternatives.
The decision to have surgery should be made in consultation with a spine surgeon who can review your specific case, including your MRI findings, clinical symptoms, examination findings, and response to conservative care.
The Bottom Line
The research on disc herniation natural history is clear and reassuring. Most disc herniations get better on their own through spontaneous resorption. Conservative care works for the majority of people, with long-term outcomes similar to surgery. Surgery remains an option for specific situations, but it's not the default for most disc herniations.
If you've been told you have a disc herniation, understand that this doesn't define your future. Your body has powerful healing mechanisms. Give conservative care a real chance, stay engaged with your treatment, and know that improvement is not only possible but likely.
- 96% of sequestered disc fragments, 70% of extrusions, and 41% of protrusions show regression on follow-up MRI
- Larger herniations are more likely to resorb than smaller ones
- Most resorption occurs within 6-12 months
- Many asymptomatic people have disc herniations on imaging (64% in one major study)
- Surgery provides faster relief but similar 2-4 year outcomes compared to conservative care
- Clinical improvement often precedes structural healing on MRI
Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. The information provided does not create a doctor-patient relationship between the reader and the practitioner. Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition or before starting any treatment program.
The DC (Doctor of Chiropractic) designation is not a medical or dental qualification and is not currently regulated by the Ministry of Health (MOH) in Singapore. Chiropractic services are considered complementary and alternative treatments and are self-regulated through professional associations.
Individual results may vary. Research findings represent population-level data and may not apply to every individual case. If you have symptoms of cauda equina syndrome or progressive neurological deficit, seek immediate medical attention.