Thank you for your very interesting and thought provoking posts Leila Rose.LeilaRose wrote:Why do you believe that?birdlife wrote:We are all hacked off by previous misdiagnoses along the way, but kidney stones would be a rare one. Simple blood test/xray would rule those out straight away.
My understanding is they are quite common, and famously cause pain. I wonder -- how many people here went ahead with PNE surgery without getting kidney stones ruled out. Comments, anyone?
I never heard of a blood test or Xray for kidney stones. CT Scan with contrast is supposed work (a fancy xray) but it may not catch small painful stones which pass through quickly and cause bad pain on the way. As wacky (and ugghy! and improvised) as peeing into a coffee filter may sound, it's one way doctors routinely (and for many years) catch kidney stones when other methods fail. There is more than one type and size of kidney stone, and the related causes/frequency of pain/best way to diagnose varies based on the type.
But Predgabas knows none of that -- based on her article. Or other things that cause pelvic pain. How dare she hold herself as a diagnostic authority!
And the key point is this: she writes an article about distinguishing between PN and PNE, but she says the only real proof is surgery. And yet the PNE surgeons have results that are far from reliable (at least in some cases TERRIBLE). So to take what Predenga says on face value no one knows but the surgeons, and based on the track record of surgeons I am not confident they know either.
I'm sure that's sincerely true! And the one sure thing is any relief from pain is welcome.birdlife wrote: Many on here have been helped more by PT's than doctors
But I gave pelvic massage a big chance, and I think it feels good because massage feels good. And I understand why people like PT -- it's a kind of kindness and close personal attention no doctor gives.
That's not what I wrote.birdlife wrote:You don't like Stephanie Prendergast's opinion because she's not a doctor?
Her statements appear to have absolutely nothing behind them -- no anatomy, no real science, nothing but her opinion. The whole idea of "retraining muscles" is unscientific and illogical and farfetched -- based on totally uncritical subjective judgments.
Just about all of us here seem to doubt doctor promises. As a non-doctor with no sign of any understanding of science or scientific medicine, Prengrass has no basis to say what she says with such authority. She can't say what causes pelvic pain because she has no idea it's caused by multiple things -- or how those things are tested. In the end she admits SHE doesn't know the difference between PN and PNE -- only the surgeons know. Except based on their results maybe they don't.
Seriously am I the only one frustrated here?
It is all a puzzle and it does seem that no-one has a definitive answer. Surgery seems to me to be very risky and without a good success rate.As you say, some people have had several surgeries with no improvement and some even have had significant worsening after surgery.
I've noticed that a hot bath always results in an almost immediate improvement/ temporary ending of my pain, and I can sit in the hot bath for a few moments without pain-does this mean I don't have entrapment? Somehow the hot water causes something to relax or release. If only I could cause this to happen all day.I've tried various muscle relaxants-valium helps, but what does that mean?
I found the physiotherapists I saw did no longer term follow up and I've yet to find one that keeps records of PN patients and results-or even case studies.
Edit: Also, I'm very interested in the idea of kidney stones being a possible cause of pelvic pain. I had kidney stones in the past but I wonder whether they can cause long term pain lasting for years.