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PNE Symptoms
Frequently Asked Questions
This
page is under construction.
To avoid one person having to do too much,
and because I'm not that well qualified, we need folks to
volunteer to take charge of creating and maintaining the following
FAQ pages:
- Symptoms
- Diagnosis
- Treatment
- Dealing with Pain
- Doctors
- General
These are the initial categories. They will
probably change as we develop these pages.
The Doctors FAQ page will handle very popular
and delicate questions like:
- Who's a good doctor?
- Is so and so a good doctor?
- How can I make the most of a visit to my doctor?
- What have you heard lately about so and so?
- What is so and so's speciality all about?
- Who's the best for such and such symptoms?
These pages will be based on opinion and
backed up with facts, such as patient experiences and message
quotes. They will be immensely helpful, organizing all sorts
of crucial information into cohesive, single topics. As the
number of messages in the forum swells to over 10,000, people
will no longer be able to learn from reading or searching
the messages nearly as well as they can learn from reading
the FAQs, as well as the Information pages.
Until the forum is open, see the Contacts
page on how to email me.
Thanks,
Jack
1. What
are the classic PNE symptoms?
Classic PNE is unexplained pain anywhere
in the area served by the pudendal nerve. The pain is easily
provoked by sitting, because this increases pressure on the
nerve. The pain is usually reduced or entirely relieved by
not sitting, or by sitting on a lavatory seat, because this
decreases nerve pressure.
The closer your symptoms are to the classic
ones, the easier the diagnosis.
Note that pain in the edge of the pudendal
nerve area may or may not be PN, such as the pain that some
report on the insides of the ischial tuberosities, an area
also served by other nerves. Even pain in the pudendal nerve
area may not be due to pudendal nerve damage, but to something
else, such as vulvodynia/vulvar vestibulitis. The pudendal
area is often very tricky to diagnosis and treat. Numbness
is another symptom, but is not common enough for Dr. Robert
to include it in the classic PNE symptoms. As he states in
the article PNE by Dr. Robert:
"They have uni- or bilateral
pain in the territory of the pudendal nerve and this pain
is exacerbated, if not entirely provoked, by the seated
position."
"The site of the pain is in
the perineum,
and may be anterior (urogenital), posterior (anal) or mixed.
Situated in the territory of the pudendal nerve,
it is uni- or bilateral and to be distinguished from other
regional pains with which it must not be confused (coccydynia,
located more posteriorly, neuralgia of the ilioinguinal,
iliohypogastric or genitofemoral nerves). In two-thirds
of the cases women are affected. The character of the pain
consists of sensations of burning, torsion or heaviness,
and also of foreign bodies in the rectum or vagina."
"The positional nature of
the pain is very suggestive. At a certain point in the case
history the seated position provokes or exacerbates the
pain. These patients have no pain at night and are comfortable
when standing or lying on the non-painful
side especially. It is an important point that they have
no pain when on the lavatory seat, ie when the painful
zone is relieved from pressure. The main daily activities
requiring the seated position (work, meals, driving, theaters,
etc) are no longer available to these patients, whose mental
attitude is one of chronic pain sufferers so obsessed with
their miserable state as to be rapidly regarded by their
doctors as psychiatric cases."
"Perineal sensation is preserved
for long, as is muscular trophicity. Urinary disturbances
are usually absent, and sexual problems are related to loss
of libido resulting from the pain. Rectal examination is
painful opposite the ischial spine. Pressure at this level
quite often elicits the same type of pain as that felt spontaneously."
However, there are cases of the pain not
being reduced when on the toilet seat, standing, or laying
down. My layman's guess is this is because these cases have
progressed to a very chronic condition. In a highly chronic
case the nerve becomes so entrapped that sufficient pressure
to cause pain is always present. This permanent pressure
is greater than that caused by sitting, so one's behavior
no longer makes a difference. A inflammed ligament, a
swollen nerve, nerve scarring, or all these, or even other
things can cause permanent nerve pressure. This is why it's
important to stop making the problem worse.
If you become so chronic that pain is always
present, it is still important to not sit, because not sitting
can give inflammation and irritation a chance to recover.
Do not fall into the trap of thinking otherwise.
Most cases of PNE are not classic
ones, according to Dr. Ken Renney. That's what makes most
cases so devilishly difficult for the average doctor to associate
with a single condition like PNE, and for even an expert to
diagnose without serious testing. Even the PNE surgeon is
not sure until they go inside that it's PNE, but it usually
is. As Prof Robert says about the small percentage of cases
where PNE surgery fails to cause improvement, they were probably
not cases of entrapment.
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