Varices Have Been A Confirmed Cause of Pudendal Compression
Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 7:01 pm
Although it may or may be rarer than other causes, branches of the Pudendal nerve have been confirmed to be compressed by Varices(enlarged veins) Dr. Aszmann,(Austria) and Dr. Possover M.(Switzerland) have both confirmed this from surgery. Dr. Aszmann has confirmed 2 cases of this occurrence to me personally. Having said that it is best probably to let the nerve surgeons handle the Varices in these areas so close to the nerves and I'm pretty sure that Aszmann ligates and resects it if he finds it to be the problem. I'm not sure how other nerve surgeons would handle the enlarged veins if they found it to be the cause of compression, but it would probably be the same way. Dr. Dellon has also said that if the Varices are the cause of the compression that he can also take care of it during surgery.
I don't think that Aszmann or some other sugeons recommend doing sclerosing of the vein as it may possibly cause more scare tissue, and it is probably best to let them do the surgery in case Varices is not the cause of the compression and the only way to really know for sure is by surgery that we know of so far, since nobody has confirmed they have gotten better by getting the veins taken care of by sclerosing or embolisation alone so far anyways.
Here is a sample of my conversation with Dr. Aszmann
Hi Dr. Aszmann, Have you ever operated on somebody with varices (pelvic congestion) in the pelvis or dorsal branch of pudendal nerve in which case the varices (enlarged veins) was the only cause of the compression of the dorsal branch of the nerve or another nerve in the pelvis? I'm just curious. Thanks
Yes, a man and a woman. Both had the diagnosis “venous congestion in the urogenital diaphragm” in their MRI report. Intraoperatively the woman had varicous veins and a rather large pudendal artery bilaterally. The man had a very bulbous ischiocavernous body on the affected side- the other being almost normal. In men the space available is very tiny, since the canal of the dorsal nerve is anatomically tight already. The woman had tried intravasal application of a foam to obliterate the venous network- to no avail hoewever. I have operated her just before the summer and she is fine so far. The man I have not heard of after a 3 month follow-up phone call.
He also said he has seen enlarged blood vessels causing compression in other areas of the body in his email he sent to me . Here is the rest of his email There are many other nerve compressions caused by blood vessels in other body parts. Some of them even have a name. In the upper extremity the radial nerve can be compressed by prominent vessels- if so these vessels are then called “the leash of Henry” Also in the tarsal tunnel for the tibial nerve this is known cause of nerve entrapment.
Hope this helps everyone to know that there is another possible cause of compression other than ligaments/tendons/scar tissue at leasst in the area of the dorsal branch of the Pudendal Nerve.
Shawn
I don't think that Aszmann or some other sugeons recommend doing sclerosing of the vein as it may possibly cause more scare tissue, and it is probably best to let them do the surgery in case Varices is not the cause of the compression and the only way to really know for sure is by surgery that we know of so far, since nobody has confirmed they have gotten better by getting the veins taken care of by sclerosing or embolisation alone so far anyways.
Here is a sample of my conversation with Dr. Aszmann
Hi Dr. Aszmann, Have you ever operated on somebody with varices (pelvic congestion) in the pelvis or dorsal branch of pudendal nerve in which case the varices (enlarged veins) was the only cause of the compression of the dorsal branch of the nerve or another nerve in the pelvis? I'm just curious. Thanks
Yes, a man and a woman. Both had the diagnosis “venous congestion in the urogenital diaphragm” in their MRI report. Intraoperatively the woman had varicous veins and a rather large pudendal artery bilaterally. The man had a very bulbous ischiocavernous body on the affected side- the other being almost normal. In men the space available is very tiny, since the canal of the dorsal nerve is anatomically tight already. The woman had tried intravasal application of a foam to obliterate the venous network- to no avail hoewever. I have operated her just before the summer and she is fine so far. The man I have not heard of after a 3 month follow-up phone call.
He also said he has seen enlarged blood vessels causing compression in other areas of the body in his email he sent to me . Here is the rest of his email There are many other nerve compressions caused by blood vessels in other body parts. Some of them even have a name. In the upper extremity the radial nerve can be compressed by prominent vessels- if so these vessels are then called “the leash of Henry” Also in the tarsal tunnel for the tibial nerve this is known cause of nerve entrapment.
Hope this helps everyone to know that there is another possible cause of compression other than ligaments/tendons/scar tissue at leasst in the area of the dorsal branch of the Pudendal Nerve.
Shawn