Second Opinion Guide
Getting a second opinion for Sciatica (Lumbar Radiculopathy)
Surgery is a significant decision. A second opinion is an opportunity to confirm the diagnosis, understand all available options, and ensure you have the most accurate picture before proceeding. Most insurance plans cover it, and most surgeons expect it.
Educational content. Not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Only a qualified clinician can evaluate your symptoms.
When is surgery typically considered for Sciatica (Lumbar Radiculopathy)?
Surgical decompression (microdiscectomy or laminectomy) is typically considered after 6–12 weeks of conservative care without meaningful improvement, or earlier for progressive motor weakness or severe functional impairment.
Note: Conservative options for Sciatica (Lumbar Radiculopathy) include Physical Therapy, Oral Medications, Epidural Steroid Injection. See the full conservative care breakdown →
What to bring to your second opinion appointment
Arriving prepared helps the second-opinion specialist make an independent assessment — not just confirm the first recommendation.
- MRI or CT scan images (ask for a disc or digital copy)
- Radiology reports from your imaging
- Prior surgeon's notes and diagnosis summary
- List of conservative treatments already tried (PT, injections, medications)
- List of current medications and dosages
- Your insurance card (most plans cover second opinions)
- Written questions for the specialist
Questions to ask the second-opinion surgeon
A specialist who welcomes these questions is a good sign. If a doctor discourages them, that itself is information.
- 1Is surgery the only option, or are there conservative treatments I haven't tried?
- 2What specific structural finding are you treating, and does my symptom picture match the imaging?
- 3How many of this specific procedure do you perform per year?
- 4What is your personal complication and reoperation rate at 2 years?
- 5What happens if I choose not to have surgery for the next 3–6 months?
- 6Is there an academic or subspecialty center I should consider for a second read?
Does insurance cover a second opinion?
Most insurance plans cover second opinions, particularly when surgery has been recommended. Some plans require that the second-opinion specialist be in-network. Check your plan's pre-authorization requirements before booking — your plan's member services line can tell you specifically what applies.
Find a verified spine surgeon for your second opinion
Every surgeon on spine.co is NPI-verified through the federal NPPES registry. Search by specialty, location, and availability.
Browse spine surgeons near youEducational content. Not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Only a qualified clinician can evaluate your symptoms.