Anyone out there diagnosed with Pudendal Neuralgia?

Posted by LeighO57 @leigho55, Jun 5, 2018

I have not been on connect for quite a while since I have only recently received a diagnosis (one of many probably to come) I am looking for someone/anyone who has the pain from a surgical injury of sorts to this nerve to talk to. Is there anyone out there with Pudendal Neuralgia on connect? Thank you!

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I was diagnosed at the University of Washington in 2004, but had symptoms since 1978. It is excruciating now, but appointments now take up to a year or more to get.

I rode bicycles for thousands of miles in the last century. Since 2000, it is agonizing to sit upright on a hard chair. It also makes my legs go dead.

I did have cauda equina syndrome in 2021 (after osteomyelitis in my spine after the Pfizer). Doctors do not think this pain and numbness is cauda equina because my EMG and MRIs are normal.

I found the nerve blocks to be helpful, and while walking, sitting pain mostly goes away (I have developed what I call a pain echo where the imprint of pain from a chair continues after I stand).

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This is dreadful. I sat on a donut for 14-1/2 years until finally.......I took an anti-seizure medicine for an unrelated matter and within 2 weeks it was gone. My pelvic therapist had mentioned to me that she heard of this. Ask your doctor. It was Topamax.

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@penrodjashber

I was diagnosed at the University of Washington in 2004, but had symptoms since 1978. It is excruciating now, but appointments now take up to a year or more to get.

I rode bicycles for thousands of miles in the last century. Since 2000, it is agonizing to sit upright on a hard chair. It also makes my legs go dead.

I did have cauda equina syndrome in 2021 (after osteomyelitis in my spine after the Pfizer). Doctors do not think this pain and numbness is cauda equina because my EMG and MRIs are normal.

I found the nerve blocks to be helpful, and while walking, sitting pain mostly goes away (I have developed what I call a pain echo where the imprint of pain from a chair continues after I stand).

Jump to this post

I am interested in how you were diagnosed with equina syndrome. I have read extensively and have watched all the Utube videos. I possibly have pudendal neuralgia also. My past has involved some spine surgery, most lately a process performed by a neurologist in Little Rock, Ark. known as a Vari Lift Procedure. About that time I began to be diagnosed as OAB as I was peeing in my pants. I am a 84 year old male and all of my vitals are within norms. My first encounter with a problem related to the fact that sitting down was painful on my right side. I had a lot of procedures to try to correct that. I just deal with it and know how to avoid pain. I am very interested to know how cauda aquina was diagnosed and how it has affected your life. There are some very scary reports out there about this condition. Thanks in advance, Jerry.

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@jwm61

I am interested in how you were diagnosed with equina syndrome. I have read extensively and have watched all the Utube videos. I possibly have pudendal neuralgia also. My past has involved some spine surgery, most lately a process performed by a neurologist in Little Rock, Ark. known as a Vari Lift Procedure. About that time I began to be diagnosed as OAB as I was peeing in my pants. I am a 84 year old male and all of my vitals are within norms. My first encounter with a problem related to the fact that sitting down was painful on my right side. I had a lot of procedures to try to correct that. I just deal with it and know how to avoid pain. I am very interested to know how cauda aquina was diagnosed and how it has affected your life. There are some very scary reports out there about this condition. Thanks in advance, Jerry.

Jump to this post

I was fortunate to find a neurosurgeon at the University of Washington who knows how to read MRIs very well. All other doctors had missed it. Previously, I had been treated by many doctors who did not recognize the symptoms. I did not know when I had to use the bathroom and over a summer became incontinent. I started using a walker because I was having great difficulty lifting my legs when walking. When I saw an orthopedist who specializes in spines, I could not rise from a chair or balance on two feet. He referred me to the UW, which took several months. During the interim, I had a month and a half of no symptoms at all. Then I suddenly got so bad I needed a wheelchair (one leg would not propel ahead of the other leg) and was wearing diapers full time. I could only pee standing up (I am a female). When I saw the neurosurgeon, he scheduled me that week for a 14 hour surgery. I walked normally the night after surgery. I just saw the neurosurgeon in December with this difficulty rising from a chair and buttocks going numb but painful, but he did not suspect cauda equina because I am still continent. That seems to be the most important criteria. I walk one or two hours a day so I have the necessary muscles.

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@penrodjashber

I was diagnosed at the University of Washington in 2004, but had symptoms since 1978. It is excruciating now, but appointments now take up to a year or more to get.

I rode bicycles for thousands of miles in the last century. Since 2000, it is agonizing to sit upright on a hard chair. It also makes my legs go dead.

I did have cauda equina syndrome in 2021 (after osteomyelitis in my spine after the Pfizer). Doctors do not think this pain and numbness is cauda equina because my EMG and MRIs are normal.

I found the nerve blocks to be helpful, and while walking, sitting pain mostly goes away (I have developed what I call a pain echo where the imprint of pain from a chair continues after I stand).

Jump to this post

I am now working with doctors to see if CES is the cause of my incontinence. I do have the sitting down pain problem which goes away when I stand, walk or lye down on my stomach.

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