Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Pudendal Nerve Entrapment

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Pudendal Nerve Entrapment"— Presentation transcript:

1 Pudendal Nerve Entrapment
Michael Hibner, MD, PhD Director, Division of Gynecologic Surgery Director Arizona Center for Chronic Pelvic Pain St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center Assistant Professor of Clinical Ob/Gyn University of Arizona College of Medicine

2 Pudendal neuralgia Pain caused by the injury to the pudendal nerve.
Pain is in: ♀♂ perineum, rectum ♀ vulva, vagina, clitoris ♂ penis, scrotum (not testicles)

3 Anatomy Originates in S2-S4
Exits pelvis through greater sciatic foramen Wraps around sacrospinous ligament Enters perineal region Provides motor, sensory and autonomic innervation to pelvic organs, pelvic floor muscles and external genitalia

4 Neuropathic pain Burning Paresthesia Allodynia Hyperesthesia

5 Pudendal neuralgia Injury to the pudendal nerve most commonly caused by the entrapment of pudendal nerve (PNE) Analogous to carpal tunnel syndrome PNE may be Idiopathic Traumatic Iatrogenic

6

7 Area of distribution Only the area in yellow concerns the pudendal nerve. The red area concerns the iliohypogastric nerve, the ilioinguinal nerve and the genitofemoral nerve. The blue area concerns the inferior cluneal nerve which is a branch of the posterior cutaneous nerve of the thigh. These differents areas co-inside which means that there is not necessarily loss of sensitivity A. iliohypogastric, ilioinguinal and genitofemoral nerves B. pudendal nerve C. inferior cluneal nerve (perineal ramifications of the posterior cutaneous nerve of the thigh)

8 Pudendal neuralgia may present as
Urinary hesitancy, urgency and frequency. Interstitial Cystitis Prostatodynia Anal spasm/pain Scrotal/Labial pain/Vulvodynia Pain with orgasm or sexual arousal Persistent sexual arousal

9 Pain with pudendal neuralgia
Usually only present when sitting down Not present when lying down or standing up Not present on the toilet Progressively getting worse Worsening as the day goes by

10 Pain is… Not responsive to pain medications Some response to
antiseizure meditations (Neurontin, Lyrica) antidepressants (Amitryptiline)

11 Diagnosis History Physical examination PNMTL
Quantitive threshold sensory testing Diagnostic CT guided injection

12 Diagnosis of PNE Mean time to make the diagnosis is 4 years with a range of 1-15 years. The number of physicians consulted before the diagnosis is made is

13 Physical Examination Rule out other reasons for chronic pelvic pain
Rule out vulvar/vaginal/rectal/perineal lesions Rule out other neuropathies Obturator Inferior cluneal Sciatic Rule out coccygodynia Rule out piriformis muscle syndrome

14 Physical Examination No motor deficits
Pain on the vaginal/rectal examination Area of the ischial spine Obturator internus muscle Levator ani muscle

15

16 Laboratory testing

17 PNMTL

18 Therapy for PNE Behavioral changes Conservative therapy Surgery
Physical therapy Oral medications CT guided injections Surgery

19

20 Medical treatment Gabapentin (Neurontin) Amitryptiline (Elavil)
Start slowly Titrate to mg/day Pregabaline (Lyrica) Start 75 mg BID May increase to 600 mg/day Beladonna and Opium (B&O) suppository

21 CT guided injections

22 CT guided injection – Alcock’s canal

23 Surgery Offered to the patients in whom physical examination ruled out other causes for neuropathy Offered only to the patients that had an immediate improvement after the injection No age limits or duration limits, but results better in younger patients with a shorter period of compression

24 Surgery – transgluteal approach
30 angle 6-7 cm 3 fb

25

26 Surgery - transgluteal

27 Surgery cranial medial

28 Surgery

29 Surgery

30 Surgery

31 Incidence of PNE at Various Sites
Sacrospinous Ligament – 58% Sacrotuberous Ligament – 69% Falciform Process – 42% Ischial Spine – 11% Piriformis – Sacrospinous Ligament – 17% Obturator Fascia – 48% Unilateral entrapment in 70% of patients.

32 Results No improvement Worse 33% 1% No pain or Moderate improvement
significant improvement Moderate improvement 23% 44%

33 Results First improvement 3-4 months from surgery
Maximum improvement 1 year Worse results (30% success) if Age > 70 Symptoms > 10 years

34 Postop Management Hospital stay 1 day No postop restrictions *
Early ambulation Continue Neurontin up to 3200 mg/day or Lyrica up to 600 mg/day If no significant improvement – CT guided injection at 4 months


Download ppt "Pudendal Nerve Entrapment"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google