Sciatica at 36 Weeks Pregnant
Sciatica — shooting, burning, or radiating pain that travels from the lower back down through the buttock and into one leg — affects many pregnant women, particularly in the second and third trimesters.
👶 What's Happening at Week 36
Your baby is now the size of a swiss chard.
- The baby sheds most of the lanugo (fine body hair).
- Fat continues rounding out the cheeks and body.
- The digestive system is ready to process breast milk.
🔬 Why You're Experiencing Sciatica at Week 36
- Growing uterus and baby press directly on the sciatic nerve
- Pelvic instability from relaxin hormone allows shifting that irritates the nerve
- Poor posture adaptation to the growing belly shifts the spine
- Baby's position — when the baby is in a posterior or low position, pressure on the sciatic nerve increases
- Weight gain increases overall spinal and pelvic load
💊 Relief Tips for Week 36
📋 Other Week 36 Symptoms
⚠️ Call Your Doctor If…
- Numbness, tingling, or weakness in your leg or foot
- Loss of bladder or bowel control
- Severe pain that doesn't improve with rest and home remedies
- Pain after a fall or trauma
Frequently Asked Questions
Is sciatica pain dangerous in pregnancy?
Sciatica is painful but not dangerous. It poses no direct risk to the baby. However, numbness, weakness, or loss of bowel/bladder control warrants urgent evaluation.
What does pregnancy sciatica feel like?
It typically feels like a sharp, shooting, burning, or electric pain starting in the lower back or buttock and radiating down one leg to the knee, calf, or foot.
Does sciatica during pregnancy mean a difficult birth?
No — sciatica does not predict labor complications. If the baby is pressing on the nerve, delivery naturally resolves the pressure.
When does pregnancy sciatica start?
It most commonly begins in the second trimester (weeks 14–27) when the uterus grows large enough to press on the nerve, and may worsen in the third trimester.