I'm very glad your second surgery with Dr. Conway was more helpful. I sincerely appreciate the information you've shared about your surgeries.
I'm not quite sure what you mean by this. Could you please explain?blightcp wrote:the pudendial EMG showed propogaion delay he was confident there was an entrapment. The surgery was considered a diagnostic procedure.
Does you ilioinguinal pain still persists or have you had a neurectomy?blightcp wrote: I was treated for illionguinal pain for 2 years as my symptoms just got worse.
blightcp wrote:The reson for this is that the pudendal nerve is nit visable via the TIA method. The transglutial allows you to see the complete nerve.
There was a lady who used to post in our community that summed this concept up very well. She basically explained that the words "less invasive" are a mind trap. Less invasive doesn't necessarily mean more effective.blightcp wrote: I would much rather have a larger incesion and allow the suregon a clear view of the nerve than a minimal view that may not find the problem.
Yes! I'm aware of Dr. Conways skills using DaVinci Robotics for certain procedures. However, nerve surgeries are very delicate and some of the tools used for "minimally invasive procedures" can cause a great deal of harm to the nerves and surrounding structures.blightcp wrote:I know that Dr. Conway uses the DaVinci robotic suite for other obgyn procedures. So if there was a way to use a minimally invasive method i would assume he would be working on how to propose/present it (i'm an engineer not a doctor so i'm not clear on how somone would go about creating a new type of procedure).
Some people have improved from the TIR approach. I find it interesting that your PN problem was solved on one side, but you got re-entrapped on the other. It's also interesting to note that some folks who had the TIR surgery and didn't improve and then went on to have the TG approach and were found to be entrapped in the ligaments.
Kind regards,
Karyn