Veterans with chronic sciatica from disc-related causes may qualify for community-care regenerative options under the Mission Act. Intra-annular fibrin injection seals annular tears with an FDA-approved fibrin sealant — addressing the underlying cause that conservative care often cannot close.

Key Takeaways

  • About 65.6% of veterans report recent pain.
  • Disc-related sciatica often persists when annular tears remain unaddressed.
  • Mission Act may cover community-care regenerative options.
  • The procedure is outpatient and uses no hardware.
  • Valor handles VA paperwork directly.

What Causes Sciatica in Veterans?

Most sciatica is disc-related — herniation, contained bulge, or annular tear irritating a lumbar nerve root. Veterans with histories of training loads, ruck-marching, or vehicle-related impacts are at higher risk than age-matched civilians.

Why Does Sciatica Sometimes Persist?

Conservative care reduces inflammation and improves nerve mobility, but it does not close annular tears. When the tear is the unaddressed driver, sciatica returns after each round of treatment.

What Are the Treatment Options?

  • VA-coordinated conservative care: PT, medication.
  • Image-guided injections: epidural, nerve root blocks.
  • Surgical paths when indicated.
  • Regenerative care under Mission Act when criteria are met.

How Does Regenerative Care Help Sciatica?

Intra-annular fibrin injection seals the annular tear so the disc can heal. Stabilizing the tear often reduces the inflammatory cycle that irritates the nerve root. Reported 83% long-term success across 7,000+ tracked patients.

Clinical Note

The Valor team works with veterans whose sciatica has not resolved through standard VA care. Our clinical staff coordinates directly with VA case managers and handles paperwork. The administrative burden should not fall on the veteran.

Who Is a Candidate?

  • Veterans with chronic disc-related sciatica.
  • Imaging suggesting annular tear or contained herniation.
  • Conservative care without lasting relief.
  • Mission Act eligibility or self-pay.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I confirm Mission Act eligibility?

Eligibility depends on distance, wait times, and clinical factors. Valor’s staff helps confirm.

Will my VA primary care doctor handle the referral?

Often yes. Valor also liaises with VA case managers when needed.

What if surgery has already been recommended?

A second evaluation that explicitly considers regenerative options is reasonable.

How long does paperwork take?

Timelines vary by VISN. Valor manages and updates throughout.

Sources & Further Reading

  • VA — Mission Act community care
  • AAFP — Sciatica evaluation and management
  • NIH — Lumbar radiculopathy
  • CDC — Pain prevalence

Medical disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes and does not replace medical advice. Consult your physician about any condition or treatment decision.

Schedule a consultation with the Valor team to discuss eligibility and next steps.

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