cpps-admin gave you a link to the full study. Unfortunately there is very little interest in anything that may weaken the favored dogma. nyt trying to backpedal and revise her judgment to line up with your beliefs speaks volumes.Vilet M wrote: I haven't seen the whole study so I could not dissect every word of the study. All I had access to is the abstract
I can also google in 10 seconds anything or its opposite to substantiate any argument.BTW, adhesions can occur in people who never had surgery. http://www.webmd.com/a-to-z-guides/adhe ... print=true
Scar tissue can form over years of microtrauma. It doesn't have to be some major incident. http://nurse-practitioners-and-physicia ...
According to my physiatrist, pelvic adhesions can occur on reproductive organs but for the pudendal nerve it has to be an accident or surgery (he was not very impressed by my surgery report although he is not one of the self-proclaimed PNE experts).
Thanks for the offer but I will pass. The fact that you list and promote Possover and Beco is enough for me to stay away.Nonsequitur, you are very new to the forum. I would be interested to hear more about your story/surgery, etc.
Your newsletter on PGAD is once again recommending pudendal nerve decompression surgery as the most effective treatment.
Dr. Leiblum that you cite in your paper reached different conclusions regarding PGAD.Pudendal Nerve Decompression Surgery
•Some patients have stated that this provided the most significant relief. Some patients report near
cures although there are rare cases of PNE surgery causing PGAD temporarily or for extended periods
of time.
PGAD as an anxiety disorder. An aspect that you completely neglect in your report.Conclusions. Women who met all the criteria of PGAD were more likely than women who only met some of the criteria to report depression, anxiety, panic attacks, and certain obsessive-compulsive symptoms such as monitoring their physical sensations. It is hypothesized that for a subset of women, psychological factors, namely anxiety, reinforce exacerbate and maintain PGAD.
Leiblum S, Seehuus M, Goldmeier D, and Brown C. Psychological, medical, and pharmacological correlates of persistent genital arousal disorder. J Sex Med 2007;4:1358–1366.
You also mention:
You do realize that "cognitive behavioral therapy" is not a relaxation technique.Relaxation techniques including cognitive behavioral therapy
Not everything is pudendal. That reductionist attitude is unscientific and dangerous.