chenonceau wrote:
I'm sorry but the facts are wrong (at least not true anymore). de B. is not injecting anesthetics, only steroids. (I had two in november '16). Nantes, on the other hand, is dropping steroids.
Chenonceau this is not correct. de Bisschop must use an anesthetic. All steroid nerve blocks contain an anesthetic if not for diagnostic, it is used to ease the pain.
You are saying that Nantes is not following their own "gold standard" Nantes criteria!!!??? Surprising? Not really. It shows again how sketchy that criteria is.
Here is the full Nantes criteria:
Decompression and Transposition of the Pudendal Nerve in Pudendal Neuralgia: A Randomized Controlled Trial and Long-Term Evaluation
Dr. Robert
Pain is unilateral or bilateral, is exacerbated in the seated position, and is not marked at night. Patients had to be between the ages of 18–70, in good general health, have a pain intensity of at least 7 on a 10 visual analogue scale (VAS) [7] a minimum score of 3 on the behavior scale (Table 1), a positive diagnostic response to an anesthetic block of the pudendal nerve defined as numbness in the usually painful area after nerve block with a temporary reduction in pain while seated, persistence of perineal pain in spite of at least two steroid blocks of the pudendal nerve at the ischial spine and in Alcock’s canal.
They want at least 2 steroid nerve blocks.
BTW, there is a massive contradiction in what de Bisschop writes. In 2009 he said:
http://www.doctissimo.fr/html/dossiers/ ... endale.htm
Des infiltrations sont envisagées en première intention et peuvent soulager le patient. Mais elles ne peuvent être répétées plus de deux ou trois fois sous peine d'altérer les tissus entourant le nerf. Si les infiltrations sont sans succès, la chirurgie sera nécessaire.
But in 2010 he wrote:
http://www.em-consulte.com/article/2859 ... [quote]Une infiltration tronculaire effectuée au niveau de la coulée infrapiriforme et de la fosse ischiorectale s’est révélée positive, confirmant l’étiologie tronculaire pudendale.[/quote]
In 2009, he said that a failed steroid nerve block makes you a candidate for surgery. But then the next year he said that people he performed surgery on, indeed responded positively to the steroid block before surgery.
So where does gabriel81 fit? According to the the 2009 criteria he should have pudendal surgery but then according to the 2010 criteria he should not because he did not respond to the steroid block!
Au pays de Descartes, ce n'est pas très cartésien.
The problem is what do you tell to people that could be in these 15% ? Don't do it, it's placebo ? I think people would do anything to be cured...
Do you agree with my number or do you agree with de Bisschop that claims he has a 89% success rate?
BTW, he had 89% success rate in 2009 with 43 patients while the last paper in 2012 shows 512 patients with the same 89% success rate. Don't tell me the success rate is the same between a small sample of 43 patients and 512 patients. For anyone that has taken a class in statistics, that is highly suspicious and shows that he never recomputed his statistics.
So if 89% success rate is correct go for surgery. Everybody should do it. Not as a last resort but as maybe a 2nd line of treatment after PT.
If 15% is closer to reality, that's another story.
You probably go on pudendalsite and also witness that even people that said they improved after surgery tend to relapse (despite the moderators that silence all dissident voices over there).
On the success section of pudendalhope, 2/3 of people that claimed that surgery cured them have relapsed. It does not contradict my statistics. Quite the opposite.