Pain With No Objective Sensory Impairment
what exactly does this mean?
please hope someone can explain in laymans terms.
is it saying that you NEED to have different sensory/sensations in the area that also experiences pain?This is an essential clinical finding. The presence of a superficial perineal sensory deficit is highly suggestive of a sacral nerve root lesion, particularly involving the cauda equina nerve roots, or a sacral plexus lesion. These proximal lesions usually do not cause pain and present clinically with sensorimotor deficits, especially sensory loss and sphincter motor disorders. Several hypotheses can be proposed to explain this absence of objective sensory impairment. The compression may be insufficient to induce a lesion of the fibers of superficial sensation, as observed in the case of sciatica and many cases of carpal tunnel syndrome. It may also have an anatomical explanation, as several anatomical territories overlap at this level: the territory of the pudendal nerve, the territory of the posterior femoral cutaneous nerve and its inferior cluneal branches, and the territories of nerves arising from the first lumbar nerves (especially ilioinguinal and genitofemoral).8
namaste