Re: New Person with Pudendal Nerve Disorder
Posted: Wed Oct 02, 2013 1:31 am
Update:
I continue to do my rehab of walking, slow running, swimming, and stretching. My PN pain/discomfort is at the lowest level it has been in over a year. (I began shockwave therapy about 1 year ago this month).
Since the sessions of Shockwave, i find I can stretch my pelvic region, my perineum, my buttocks, my hamstrings, etc, as much as i want and there is no pain flare-up from PN. So, I stretch most every night, concentrating on the hamstrings, toe - touches, and perineum stretch. It loosens me up and I figure that is good. Before shockwave, I could not do this with without a severe flare-up.
I am swimming again, and doing a lot of breaststroke, including the whip kick, which is supposedly deadly for people with PN. Again, before shockwave, if I did the whip kick (frog kick), I would get PN flares. Now I can kick quite hard and not get any pain during or after. Swimming is really relaxing for me, and I feel much better after a swim workout.
I am sitting on chairs again without a pad - not long, but I no longer have to carry my cushion around everywhere with me. I limit my sitting to no more than 20 minutes a session. I just don't want to aggravate the PN, as this has always been a big trigger.
I climbed 5 flights of stairs today with no perineum pain. I have not done this in 2 years. I felt like I had just climbed Mt. Everest. I climbed slow, one step at a time, and rested slightly between landings. I used to climb stairs for a work-out, taking two at a time, and I am a long, long ways from doing that, but this is an encouraging start.
I am not lifting weights yet. This has always been a huge trigger, so I am avoiding anything too strenuous that involves my core.
Any small step forward with PN is a welcome step. I am encouraged. I would like to go back for another shockwave session, and may do so early next year. Dr. Andrews is transitioning out of the Cornwall location, back to Ottawa, so that long drive from Ottawa airport to Cornwall is not a thing of the past. I always was concerned with the rental car, winter roads, snow storms, etc. Now, that is much less a concern.
So far, almost 3 years with PN, shockwave is the only modality that has moved me forward. I have had about 5 steroid injections, and I cannot definitively say that these helped.
For those of you who are despairing (as I was) because of this condition, consider shockwave therapy. Results cannot be guaranteed, but any improvement is worth the trip and cost. What we need to do, is get shockwave therapy approved in USA. Any idea how we would might do this???
kone
I continue to do my rehab of walking, slow running, swimming, and stretching. My PN pain/discomfort is at the lowest level it has been in over a year. (I began shockwave therapy about 1 year ago this month).
Since the sessions of Shockwave, i find I can stretch my pelvic region, my perineum, my buttocks, my hamstrings, etc, as much as i want and there is no pain flare-up from PN. So, I stretch most every night, concentrating on the hamstrings, toe - touches, and perineum stretch. It loosens me up and I figure that is good. Before shockwave, I could not do this with without a severe flare-up.
I am swimming again, and doing a lot of breaststroke, including the whip kick, which is supposedly deadly for people with PN. Again, before shockwave, if I did the whip kick (frog kick), I would get PN flares. Now I can kick quite hard and not get any pain during or after. Swimming is really relaxing for me, and I feel much better after a swim workout.
I am sitting on chairs again without a pad - not long, but I no longer have to carry my cushion around everywhere with me. I limit my sitting to no more than 20 minutes a session. I just don't want to aggravate the PN, as this has always been a big trigger.
I climbed 5 flights of stairs today with no perineum pain. I have not done this in 2 years. I felt like I had just climbed Mt. Everest. I climbed slow, one step at a time, and rested slightly between landings. I used to climb stairs for a work-out, taking two at a time, and I am a long, long ways from doing that, but this is an encouraging start.
I am not lifting weights yet. This has always been a huge trigger, so I am avoiding anything too strenuous that involves my core.
Any small step forward with PN is a welcome step. I am encouraged. I would like to go back for another shockwave session, and may do so early next year. Dr. Andrews is transitioning out of the Cornwall location, back to Ottawa, so that long drive from Ottawa airport to Cornwall is not a thing of the past. I always was concerned with the rental car, winter roads, snow storms, etc. Now, that is much less a concern.
So far, almost 3 years with PN, shockwave is the only modality that has moved me forward. I have had about 5 steroid injections, and I cannot definitively say that these helped.
For those of you who are despairing (as I was) because of this condition, consider shockwave therapy. Results cannot be guaranteed, but any improvement is worth the trip and cost. What we need to do, is get shockwave therapy approved in USA. Any idea how we would might do this???
kone