No Anatomical Abnormality

Many physical activites such as sports, pelvic surgery, etc can all contribute to PN
Post Reply
JackieOUCH
Posts: 58
Joined: Thu Oct 28, 2010 7:06 pm

No Anatomical Abnormality

Post by JackieOUCH »

Hi Everybody,

Just had an MRI in which they tried to recreate Potters' Protocol, but I have no way of knowing if the local radiologist knows how to read it or if it was truly done to specification...etc.....

When I called for results, this is all the nurse read: "No pelvic anatomical abnormality to explain Pudendal Neuropathy"

This was a bit of a shock as I am made worse by so many physical positions/actions.

So if there's truly not an anatomical explanation (scar tissue on ligaments...etc....)....What' left? A disease process? Well I've been tested for everything twice and all is negative. I don't think my pain is from the Endometriosis I had either.

My neurologist thinks there are many nerves involved.

Has anyone had a so-called Potter MRI at another medical center and sent the MRI to Potter for interpretation?

Any thoughts, theories, feedback appreciated. I'm sick of trying to figure this out.

Less pain,

Jackie OUCH

One more thing.....acupuncture makes me worse for about 24 hours after, and then I go back to my baseline pain.
Started with severe burning sacral pain to R hip/pelvis, bladder, bowel
History Endometriosis
Antolak Diagnosed PN--1 PN block made pain much worse & more widespread for a year
PT 2 yrs--Did not help physically, but was educational
Potter MRI: Symmetric thickening Sacrotuberous ligaments/scarring ischial & Alcocks canal.
User avatar
Violet M
Posts: 6714
Joined: Mon Sep 06, 2010 6:04 am
Location: United States
Contact:

Re: No Anatomical Abnormality

Post by Violet M »

Jackie, I can't answer your question about Potter reading the MRI but it's certainly worth a try. The MRI's aren't considered 100% accurate no matter who reads them though. It's always hard when nothing shows up on the tests but you know there is something wrong.

Violet
PNE since 2002. Started from weightlifting. PNE surgery from Dr. Bautrant, Oct 2004. Pain now is usually a 0 and I can sit for hours on certain chairs. No longer take medication for PNE. Can work full time and do "The Firm" exercise program. 99% cured from PGAD. PNE surgery was right for me but it might not be for you. Do your research.
HerMajesty
Posts: 1134
Joined: Sat Sep 18, 2010 12:41 am
Location: North Las Vegas, Nevada

Re: No Anatomical Abnormality

Post by HerMajesty »

Ever get checked by a PT for SIJD? It rarely has visible manifestations on an MRI, because it is a dysfunction of movement especially during flexion and extension, not something likely to appear when you are lying still in a neutral position. It causes muscular and neuro tension throughout the pelvis.
pelvic pain started 1985 age 14 interstitial cystitis. Refused medical care from age 17, did GREAT with self care for years.
2004 PN started gradually, disabled by 2009. Underlying cause SIJD & Tarlov cysts
improved with PT & meds: neurontin, valium, nortriptyline, propanolol. (off nortriptyline & propanolol now, yay!)
Tarlov cyst surgery with Dr. Frank Feigenbaum March 20, 2012.
Results have been excellent so far; but I won't know my final functional level for a couple of years.
nyt
Posts: 1165
Joined: Sun Oct 31, 2010 3:24 am

Re: No Anatomical Abnormality

Post by nyt »

Don't get discouraged over the MRI. You can still be entrapped and it not show up on the MRI. There is the possibility that the facility did not 100% do the exact MRI protocol of Dr. Potter and the radiologist doesn't have the experience of reading the MRI like Dr. Potter. Potter did my MRI and it did show entrapment but it didn't show all my entrapments of the pudendal nerve that Dr. Hibner found during surgery so there are limitations to her method. You should also ask if there was a Tarlov cyst. Many radiologists won't report this finding because they didn't consider it important. Also, like Hermajesty said, it could be SIJD.
2/07 LAVH and TOT 7/07 TOT right side removed 9/07 IL, IH and GN neuropathy 11/07 PN - Dr. Howard
6/08 Obturator neuralgia - Dr. Conway 11/08 Disability, piriformis syndrome - Dr. Howard
4/09 Bilateral obturator decompression surgery, BLL RSD - Dr. Howard
9/10 Removed left side TOT, botox, re-evaluate obturator nerve - Dr. Hibner
2/11 LFCN and saphenous neuralgia - Dr. Dellon 2/11 MRI with Dr. Potter - confirmed entrapment
5/11 Right side TG - Dr. Hibner 2012 Left side TG - Dr. Hibner
JackieOUCH
Posts: 58
Joined: Thu Oct 28, 2010 7:06 pm

Re: No Anatomical Abnormality

Post by JackieOUCH »

First of all, thanks so much for responding to my post.

Just got back from having Dr. Potters' MRI in New York. No results yet.

A few complications:

The script was written by a Nurse Practitioner at my Pain Management facility.

When I got to NY, they initially refused to do the test without an MD prescribing it.

In my state a Nurse Practitioner CAN order MRI's so this never occurred to me. Of course the script was faxed to them weeks ahead and no one notified me of this.

After contacting the Pain Management facility in my state they realized that the Nurse Practitioner has a medical license number which is really all they needed to complete the paper work.

Here's where it gets' really complicated......I called NY ahead to make sure the MRI was covered by my insurance (Medicare), they said YES, but it turns out that I have an HMO version of Medicare and they will probably not cover....

The test will be around $3000....I said I would pay and appeal later

I have read the appeal area of this forum - which is very helpful. So, I assume I wait for them to reject and then have a few of my physicians write "A Letter Of Necessity".........any help with this would be appreciated......Like most of you, I cannot afford this.

Just thought I'd give you all a heads up on possible complications/red tape.....and hoping you have some ideas.

How on earth do any of you fly? The flight was only 2 hours, but the pain from sitting got so bad by the 2nd hour I couldn't stand to sit one more minute. Sitting on soft surfaces is really not too bad, but the cheap airplane seats really were awful!!!

Less pain, more understanding.

Jackie OUCH
Started with severe burning sacral pain to R hip/pelvis, bladder, bowel
History Endometriosis
Antolak Diagnosed PN--1 PN block made pain much worse & more widespread for a year
PT 2 yrs--Did not help physically, but was educational
Potter MRI: Symmetric thickening Sacrotuberous ligaments/scarring ischial & Alcocks canal.
deBBieW
Posts: 162
Joined: Tue Oct 25, 2011 2:59 am
Location: Milwaukee, Wis

Re: No Anatomical Abnormality

Post by deBBieW »

Hi Jackie,
Less pain, more understanding is right, you said it. How stressful for you. I brought my special little squishy cushion I use in the car, and sat on that. It helped, you are so right the airplane seats are crappy.
But flying to AZ was worse as it was longer. I did have my husband with me, that helped too.
In a few weeks I'm flying to Denver, not looking forward to it. My husband wants a vacation, a real vacation, not a medical vacation if you know what I mean.
So I'm going, and hoping for the best. My squishy cushion is going along of course.

I hope your new MRI shows something helpful, and gosh I hope they are wrong about your insurance not paying, what the heck!

best to you,
Debbie
Vag pain, leg burning 3/11, SIJ inj 7/11, Pelvic PT, Chiro/acupuncture,
2-CT pudendal blks 11/2012, did help, less deep vag pain
Potter MRI 04/2012 - Scar tissue/thickening at SS/ST, scar in Alcock canal -bilateral,
Hibner 6/12 suggests Botox (didnt do), 8/12 more pelvic PT w/ dry needling
Gabapentin 1800 mg, Lyrica 200 mg, 5mg valium, vicodin as needed
Trying to get rid of central sensitization burning pain in my legs, Valium seems to be helping
Looking into more mindfulness options. . . . .
User avatar
Violet M
Posts: 6714
Joined: Mon Sep 06, 2010 6:04 am
Location: United States
Contact:

Re: No Anatomical Abnormality

Post by Violet M »

Jackie, I used to fly at night and lie down in the extra seats when possible but it seems like flights are more crowded these days. I also used to take extra pain meds.

What a nightmare you must have had in NY! It sounds like you made all of the best decisions you could under the circumstances but what a mess. :evil:

The medically necessary letters from your physicians are a must but ideally it would be nice to include some peer-reviewed literature in your appeal. I can't remember if any of the literature on PNE recommends MRI for the diagnosis -- that might be tough to find. You could check in some of the main publications such as Hibner's article on Pudendal Neuralgia (on our publications page on the website.) Good luck. I hope you can get this paid for.

Best,

Violet
PNE since 2002. Started from weightlifting. PNE surgery from Dr. Bautrant, Oct 2004. Pain now is usually a 0 and I can sit for hours on certain chairs. No longer take medication for PNE. Can work full time and do "The Firm" exercise program. 99% cured from PGAD. PNE surgery was right for me but it might not be for you. Do your research.
JackieOUCH
Posts: 58
Joined: Thu Oct 28, 2010 7:06 pm

Re: No Anatomical Abnormality

Post by JackieOUCH »

Thank you Violet.

Using publications as a verification is an excellent idea.

Best,

Jackie OUCH
Started with severe burning sacral pain to R hip/pelvis, bladder, bowel
History Endometriosis
Antolak Diagnosed PN--1 PN block made pain much worse & more widespread for a year
PT 2 yrs--Did not help physically, but was educational
Potter MRI: Symmetric thickening Sacrotuberous ligaments/scarring ischial & Alcocks canal.
Post Reply

Return to “CAUSES & EFFECTS OF PUDENDAL NEURALGIA”