Yes, spinal decompression is safe for most adults managing herniated discs, sciatica, or chronic lumbar compression — provided no disqualifying conditions are present and force is applied gradually in the horizontal position.
Spinal decompression works by applying a controlled pulling force along the lumbar spine's axis, reducing intradiscal pressure and creating measurable intervertebral space. The short-term evidence is solid: a 2024 systematic review found manual traction significantly reduces pain and disability. However, decompression is contraindicated for specific conditions — including sequestrated disc herniations, osteoporosis, and pregnancy — where traction force can cause harm rather than relief.
- HOTMUZ standard model delivers up to 450N of traction force — roughly equivalent to 100 lbs of sustained lumbar pull.
- Absolute contraindications include sequestrated disc herniation, osteoporosis, spinal malignancy, spinal tuberculosis, and pregnancy.
- Horizontal (lying-flat) decompression removes axial gravitational load entirely, matching the mechanics of clinical traction therapy.
- Standard HOTMUZ model is rated for waist circumferences up to approximately 39 inches and body weight up to approximately 176 lbs.
- A 2024 PMC systematic review supports short-term pain and disability reduction; long-term structural outcome evidence remains mixed.
Safety Notes
- Confirmed sequestrated herniation: Stop and consult a spine specialist — traction force on a free disc fragment can worsen nerve compression significantly.
- Osteoporosis or spinal malignancy: Mechanical traction is contraindicated; the HOTMUZ device's 450N pull can stress compromised vertebral bone beyond safe limits.
- Sharp, radiating pain that intensifies during a session: Reduce force immediately — increasing nerve symptoms during decompression signal the device is not appropriate for your current presentation.
- Exceeding the standard model's size rating: Users over approximately 176 lbs or 39-inch waist circumference must use the HOTMUZ 700N enhanced model, not force-fit the standard version.
- Starting force too high on the first session: Begin at the lowest traction setting lying flat; early-session soreness is common, but skipping the break-in protocol increases risk of muscle guarding and spasm.