After lumbar disc herniation foraminoplasty, driving is generally not recommended within the first 1 month. It is recommended to drive after 3 months when the foraminoscopy has healed the annulus fibrosus or the scar inside. The reason is that although intervertebral foraminoscopy is a minimally invasive surgery, it is a simple 1cm surgical incision that solves the disease without damaging the muscles of the lumbar disc herniation and lumbar spinal stenosis. After the surgery, you can put on a lumbar brace the next day and go down to the ground, but within a month, try to avoid bending, sitting and other sports that increase the load on the lumbar disc. Because driving is a sedentary and long-term bumpy movement, the load on the lumbar spine is very heavy. After lumbar intervertebral foraminal surgery, there is a rupture in the fibrous ring, so driving in the early stage can cause the nucleus pulposus to rupture and fall out before the fibrous ring heals, leading to the recurrence of lumbar disc herniation. Therefore, driving is not recommended in the early stage, but if the annulus fibrosus has scarred and healed after 3 months, then driving is allowed.