Sciatic Nerve Flossing

A gentle seated sciatic nerve glide used to explore motion for leg symptoms that may be nerve-related—performed slowly and within comfort.

Muscles Targeted

This is a neural mobility drill. It follows the sciatic nerve pathway from the low back/hip region down the back of the leg.

Key Benefits

  • Encourages smooth sciatic nerve gliding with a simple setup
  • Great option for desk breaks and daily mobility
  • Easy to scale by reducing knee extension and ankle motion
  • Often pairs well with gentle hip mobility and walking
Mild tension can be normal. Sharp pain or worsening symptoms means reduce range and intensity.

Equipment Needed

A chair (best if your feet can hang freely). Floor seated is an option if needed.

How to Perform Sciatic Nerve Flossing

  1. Sit tall near the edge of a chair.
  2. Slowly straighten the knee as tolerated while coordinating ankle and head/neck motion as shown.
  3. Move in and out of the position with small, smooth oscillations.
  4. Keep it gentle—avoid forcing end range.
  5. Repeat on the other side.

Programming Options

  • 5–10 slow oscillations per side
  • Or 15–60 seconds of gentle movement
  • 1–2 rounds during the day

Why This Variation Works

Controlled motion can improve tolerance by encouraging normal nerve movement relative to surrounding tissues—without prolonged, aggressive stretching.

When to Use It

Desk breaks, daily mobility work, or when you notice leg tightness that feels nerve-related (performed gently and symptom-guided).

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this supposed to stretch my hamstrings?

You might feel a similar area, but the intent is gentle nerve gliding. Keep it light and avoid chasing a strong stretch.

How far should I straighten my knee?

Only to the point of mild tension. If symptoms spike, back off and use a smaller range.

What if it makes symptoms worse?

Stop and scale down next time (smaller range, slower speed, fewer reps). If symptoms persist or worsen, consult a qualified clinician.