Just ran across this article:chuck wrote:
As for the question of pelvic varices causing PNE symptoms, this is something that has interested me for a long time. During Callie's pregnancies, she had the most God-Awful varicose veins (in her legs) that any of her doctors had ever seen! They ended up thrombosed; she had to be on daily heparin therapy, etc, etc. After delivery of our last child, the veins becaome much improved, but she eventually had sclerotherapy done to shrink the last ones away.
I only mention this because knowing that she had a propensity for varices always caused me to wonder if pelvic varices were somehow involved in her PNE symptoms. It makes sense to say that the varices are so "soft" that they couldn't cause nerve compression, but when you remember that nerves often travel alongside blood vessels, and that they often travel in enclosed areas (like Alcock's canal), you begin to wonder if a dilated vein running next to a nerve, in a confined space COULD cause a problem...
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2117410/
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2006 January; 77(1): 88.
doi: 10.1136/jnnp.2005.069278.
PMCID: PMC2117410
Copyright © 2006 BMJ Publishing Group
Pudendal nerve compression by pelvic varices: successful treatment with transcatheter ovarian vein embolisation
T Moser, M‐C Scheiber‐Nogueira, T S Nogueira, A Doll, C Jahn, and R Beaujeux
T Moser, M‐C Scheiber‐Nogueira, T S Nogueira, A Doll, C Jahn, R Beaujeux, CHU Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France
Correspondence to: Dr T Moser
CHU Strasbourg, Strasbourg 67000, France; moser_th@yahoo.fr
Keywords: embolisation, pelvic varices, pudendal nerve
A 37 year old woman complained of chronic perineal pain and numbness for three years. Physical examination was unremarkable, but perineal neurophysiological testing revealed isolated abnormalities of the left pudendal nerve. The distal motor latency and the left bulbocavernous reflex latency were both lengthened (5.3 ms; normal <3.5 ms and 48 ms; normal <42 ms, respectively). Previous laparoscopy for tubal ligation also described bilateral ovarian varices more prominent on the left side, which were confirmed at pelvic CT (fig 1A1A).
Figure 1 37 year old woman with left pudendal nerve compression by pelvic varices successfully treated with transcatheter ovarian vein embolisation. (A) Contrast enhanced CT scan through the ischial spine shows left ovarian varices (arrow). (B) (more ...)
Diagnosis of Alcock syndrome was rejected because pain was not exacerbated while seated, but rather in the upright position.1 Although perineal pain has not been reported in pelvic congestion syndrome,2 the possibility of venous compression resulting in nerve damage was raised. The patient was then referred to undergo an ovarian phlebography with possible subsequent embolisation.3 The phlebogram disclosed an enlarged left ovarian vein with congestion of the ovarian plexus (fig 1B1B)) and selective left ovarian vein embolisation was performed with coils and glue (fig 1C1C).). Three months later, our patient began to notice marked reduction in perineal pain and numbness. Neurophysiologial examination performed eight months after embolisation demonstrated normalisation of the left pudendal nerve distal motor latency.
This report suggests for the first time the possible compression of the pudendal nerve by pelvic varices, and should be analysed in line with other recently reported nervous compression cases of venous origin.4,5 It also demonstrates the dramatic relief obtained after ovarian vein embolisation.