The sacroiliac (SI) joints connect the lower spine to the pelvis. When irritated or inflamed, they can cause deep buttock, hip, or lower-back pain that makes sitting, standing, or climbing stairs uncomfortable.
A sacroiliac joint injection places a small amount of numbing and anti-inflammatory medicine directly into the joint under image guidance to reduce inflammation and confirm the pain source.

SI joint injections can serve two purposes:
Diagnostic: to confirm the SI joint as the source of pain by seeing whether temporary relief occurs.
Therapeutic: to calm inflammation and ease pain from arthritis or injury.
They are commonly recommended for:
Chronic buttock or lower-back pain on one side
Pain worse with standing, walking, or transitions from sitting
Confirmed or suspected sacroiliitis or SI joint dysfunction

Preparation – You lie face down on a table. The skin is cleansed and numbed with local anesthetic.
Guidance – Using fluoroscopy (X-ray) or ultrasound, the doctor guides a fine needle into the SI joint.
Confirmation – A small amount of contrast dye verifies correct placement.
Injection – A blend of numbing medicine and a low-dose steroid is injected to reduce inflammation.

The procedure takes about 20–30 minutes, and patients go home shortly afterward
Temporary numbness or heaviness in the leg for a few hours is possible.
Mild soreness at the injection site for 1–2 days.
Steroid relief builds gradually over 3–5 days and may last for weeks to months.
Normal activity may resume the same day unless otherwise directed.
Keeping a simple pain log helps determine how effective the injection was.
SI joint injections are safe when performed under image guidance.
Possible—though uncommon—effects include:
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