UPDATE: My Story - Any Thoughts Appreciated
Posted: Wed Mar 27, 2013 4:57 pm
Like so many others, my story is long and complex. I do not want to cut it short as a part I take out might relate to someone or maybe had a similar experience. Prior to August of 2006 I was an active mother of two teenagers, running from one sporting event to another, happily married, running a household and loving my job. My life was as close to perfect as it could possibly be. I was truly happy and loving life. If someone would’ve told me what was about to happen over the next seven years, I would not have believed it possible.
My symptoms first started in August 2006 when I was sitting at my son’s soccer game. I noticed I had some vulvar vaginal burning. After a few days I went to my family doctor and they treated me for a bladder infection however my culture ended up coming back negative. The burning didn’t go away so I went to my gynecologist. He did several tests, all coming back negative, but ultimately he decided to treat me for a bacterial infection. Each course of vaginal ointment made the burning worse. I had vulvar vaginal burning, swelling, extremely inflamed, sex was difficult and I wasn’t able to sit without discomfort. My gynecologist, of almost 16 years, retired a few months after my symptoms began so for about fourteen month I went to multiple doctors, each using multiple treatments with no success of relieving my pain. I tried a low oxalate diet and all natural medicines as well, all without success.
In October 2007, I was referred to Dr. Andrew Goldstein. Although I live in Pennsylvania and his office was in Maryland, I didn’t hesitate because I was desperate for pain relief. He diagnosed me with vulvar vestibulitis. I went to physical therapy, used topical ointments and received injections. All treatments were unsuccessful in relieving my vulvar vaginal burning. In January 2009, Dr. Goldstein performed a vulvar vestibulectomy with vaginal advancement at Johns Hopkin Hospital in Baltimore. Afterwards my burning increased significantly. The only way I can describe my burning is by telling you to hold a match to your skin and then you’ll begin to feel the burning I feel constantly. I thought it was just from the surgery and I would begin to feel better, but it didn’t and I also now had occasional rectal pain. It continued to get worse until I was unable to sit at all, sex was impossible, I wasn’t sleeping because of the pain, working was difficult, my whole life no longer the resembled the life I had just a few short years prior. Every aspect of my life had been severely affected. A few months after my surgery, Dr. Goldstein said I had defects as a result of his surgery and would need to have a revision to fix the defects. I was devastated at the thought of going through the surgery again, but at the time I felt like I didn’t have a choice. He’s the medical professional telling me he can make me better so you just say ok especially when you are desperate to have pain relief. However, before moving forward with the revision we agreed I should have the hysterectomy I’d been putting off for a while. The hysterectomy was due to my period being very heavy and lasting around 2 ½ - 3 weeks out of the month. Having the hysterectomy first would ensure I didn’t have anything hindering my recovery from his revision surgery.
In June 2009, my local gynecologist performed my hysterectomy, using the Robotic DaVinci System because it would ensure no vaginal entry. Unfortunately, the hysterectomy resulted in two more additional surgeries, both involving vaginal entry as well as a laparoscopy, to locate an artery that was compromised during the original hysterectomy. I hemorrhaged twice almost dying during the last hemorrhage. They did a catheterization going in through my groin to finally find the bleeding artery and it blocked it 80% to prevent it from “bursting” again. By this time, my burning pain had evolved into worse pain than I could have ever imagined.
In March 2010, I went to Dr. Richard Marvel, located in Maryland, for another opinion regarding the vestibulitis diagnosis. He diagnosed me with pudendal neuralgia. He said fixing the “defects” from my vulvar vestibulectomy would not improve my burning pain because my pain was coming from the pudendal nerve. At this point he didn’t feel less invasive methods would help me, that surgery was what I ultimately needed, but after the terrible experience I had just had with surgeries “gone wrong”, he agreed to less invasive first. We tried numerous medications, physical therapy again, topical ointments as well as a CT Guided Nerve Block. All were unsuccessful proving his point that I needed decompression surgery.
I decided to go back to Dr. Goldstein because in my mind I was afraid that not fixing the defects would hinder any effort in reducing my pain. In December 2010, Dr. Goldstein performed the revised vulvar vestibulectomy at George Washington University Hospital in Washington, D.C. Once again, the surgery did not help ease my pain. It only increased my burning pain and the rectal pain just after surgery was off the charts painful.
At this point, I felt hopeless. I was in so much pain it was hard to think straight. I was afraid to go to any doctor so for months I just continued suffering with my pain.
In October 2011, I found Dr. Robert Echenberg in Bethlehem, PA. He confirmed my diagnosis of Pudendal Neuralgia and also diagnosed me with Interstitial Cystitis. He started me on oral medications, topical ointments, pudendal nerve blocks and bladder instillations. The bladder instillations were successful. However after months of pudendal nerve blocks, with no relief, he referred me to Dr. Mark Conway for a surgery. In July 2012, I had the Transgluteal Approach Pudendal Nerve Decompression Surgery.
It has been a very long road. I am almost nine months out from surgery in July 2012 and I still have an unbearable amount of vulvar burning pain. Unfortunately, after surgery I now have tailbone/SI Joint pain. Dr. Echenberg and my physical therapist referred me to Dr. Jean Santo of Advanced Pain Care Management for my tailbone/SI Joint pain. She ordered an MRI. The results showed inflammation and arthritis in my SI Joints. She said it is extremely rare for someone my age (I’m 41 years old) to have arthritis in the SI Joints. Dr. Santo performed an SC Joint injection in March. It made my tailbone completely numb, but my pudendal burning pain and SI Joint pain hindered me from enjoying the numb feeling of my tailbone. I am scheduled for SI Joint injections in April.
Dr. Santo recognized the complexity of my condition for which I am extremely grateful. She asked if I was familiar with intrathecal pain pumps and I immediately told her yes as it was the number one question on my list to ask her. She felt given my condition, all that I had been through and all of the medication I’m taking yet still in a tremendous amount of pain, that I was a good candidate for an intrathecal pain pump. She personally called a specialist at Hershey Medical Center to discuss my condition so I now have an appointment with Dr. Gordin at Hershey in April. I am being cautiously optimistic. I have learned a lot over the years and one is to listen to your gut when it’s telling you something. I did not always do so. I immediately trusted Dr. Santo and feel this new door has been opened for a reason so I am going to follow it. It feels right to me.
The life I lead right now is not living. I am unable to sit at all. I only leave our house for doctor appointments as it’s very painful to ride in a vehicle. I must lie in the back seat when traveling. I am unable to walk any distance and need the assistance of a cane to do so. I haven’t been able to work since May 2012. I am unable to attend any of my son’s school or sporting events. My everyday life has been severely altered. I think of all the things I took for granted for so many years and I miss all of those things terribly.
I am no longer searching for a cure, but I continue searching for something that will provide me with some pain relief. I would be so happy just to be able to walk around the block. I’d love to go out to eat with my family. I’d love to lie down at night and just fall asleep. I’d love to wake up feeling healthy. I want to have functionality back in my life. I was finally approved for social security disability after being denied the first time. I had an attorney for the appeal. It was difficult to accept the fact I needed disability, but the reality is I am disabled. This condition has affected not only me, but my family as well. I would be dishonest if I didn’t say I have days when I feel like all hope is lost, when I am blinded with pain and unable to move without crying. Regardless, I continue to have hope.
I thought it might be helpful to list all of the things I have tried and/or currently use(d) in case anyone has a question about any.
• Vulvar Vestibuletomy’s (original, plus revision)
• Hysterectomy (resulted in two additional surgeries and a catheterization to block bleeding artery)
• Emotional Therapist to help deal living life with chronic pain
• CT Guided Nerve Block
• Muscle Activation Technique
• Acupuncture
• Meditation
• White noise/Soothing Sounds
• Pudendal Nerve Blocks
• Trigger Point Injections
• Bladder Instillations
• Colonoscopy
• PN Decompression Surgery
• Oral Medication: Oxycontin, Percocet, Ultram, Neurontin, Elmiron, Hydroxyzine HCL, Klonopin, Ambien, Linzess, Senna, Prelief, Nortriptyline (no longer taking it)
• Topical Medications
• Physical Therapy
• Aquatics Therapy
• MRI
• SC Joint Injection
• SI Joint Injections
I’d also like to mention that prior to the onset of my condition I rarely took any type of medication. I didn’t even like taking an aspirin unless absolutely necessary. I had both of my children without any type of medication. I only mention this to let everyone know how high of a tolerance to pain I had. It still amazes me when I look at the amount of medications I take, treatments as well as surgeries and their inability to ease my pain on a regular basis.
I wish I had been diagnosed correctly from the start and maybe things would be different for me now. However, I’ve learned not to dwell on the past. I cannot change my choices so I must move forward with hope of one day finding a treatment that will help ease my pain. I am looking forward to meeting with Dr. Gordin to see if I am, in fact, a candidate for an intrathecal pain pump.
Thank you to all of you for bearing with me through my long story. I am so thankful to Pudendal Hope. Although I only recently registered, I’ve been following for quite a while now. Pain is a very lonely, dark place but Pudendal Hope truly brings hope during those times.
If anyone has suggestions of treatments other than what I have currently had, please let me know.
Jen
My symptoms first started in August 2006 when I was sitting at my son’s soccer game. I noticed I had some vulvar vaginal burning. After a few days I went to my family doctor and they treated me for a bladder infection however my culture ended up coming back negative. The burning didn’t go away so I went to my gynecologist. He did several tests, all coming back negative, but ultimately he decided to treat me for a bacterial infection. Each course of vaginal ointment made the burning worse. I had vulvar vaginal burning, swelling, extremely inflamed, sex was difficult and I wasn’t able to sit without discomfort. My gynecologist, of almost 16 years, retired a few months after my symptoms began so for about fourteen month I went to multiple doctors, each using multiple treatments with no success of relieving my pain. I tried a low oxalate diet and all natural medicines as well, all without success.
In October 2007, I was referred to Dr. Andrew Goldstein. Although I live in Pennsylvania and his office was in Maryland, I didn’t hesitate because I was desperate for pain relief. He diagnosed me with vulvar vestibulitis. I went to physical therapy, used topical ointments and received injections. All treatments were unsuccessful in relieving my vulvar vaginal burning. In January 2009, Dr. Goldstein performed a vulvar vestibulectomy with vaginal advancement at Johns Hopkin Hospital in Baltimore. Afterwards my burning increased significantly. The only way I can describe my burning is by telling you to hold a match to your skin and then you’ll begin to feel the burning I feel constantly. I thought it was just from the surgery and I would begin to feel better, but it didn’t and I also now had occasional rectal pain. It continued to get worse until I was unable to sit at all, sex was impossible, I wasn’t sleeping because of the pain, working was difficult, my whole life no longer the resembled the life I had just a few short years prior. Every aspect of my life had been severely affected. A few months after my surgery, Dr. Goldstein said I had defects as a result of his surgery and would need to have a revision to fix the defects. I was devastated at the thought of going through the surgery again, but at the time I felt like I didn’t have a choice. He’s the medical professional telling me he can make me better so you just say ok especially when you are desperate to have pain relief. However, before moving forward with the revision we agreed I should have the hysterectomy I’d been putting off for a while. The hysterectomy was due to my period being very heavy and lasting around 2 ½ - 3 weeks out of the month. Having the hysterectomy first would ensure I didn’t have anything hindering my recovery from his revision surgery.
In June 2009, my local gynecologist performed my hysterectomy, using the Robotic DaVinci System because it would ensure no vaginal entry. Unfortunately, the hysterectomy resulted in two more additional surgeries, both involving vaginal entry as well as a laparoscopy, to locate an artery that was compromised during the original hysterectomy. I hemorrhaged twice almost dying during the last hemorrhage. They did a catheterization going in through my groin to finally find the bleeding artery and it blocked it 80% to prevent it from “bursting” again. By this time, my burning pain had evolved into worse pain than I could have ever imagined.
In March 2010, I went to Dr. Richard Marvel, located in Maryland, for another opinion regarding the vestibulitis diagnosis. He diagnosed me with pudendal neuralgia. He said fixing the “defects” from my vulvar vestibulectomy would not improve my burning pain because my pain was coming from the pudendal nerve. At this point he didn’t feel less invasive methods would help me, that surgery was what I ultimately needed, but after the terrible experience I had just had with surgeries “gone wrong”, he agreed to less invasive first. We tried numerous medications, physical therapy again, topical ointments as well as a CT Guided Nerve Block. All were unsuccessful proving his point that I needed decompression surgery.
I decided to go back to Dr. Goldstein because in my mind I was afraid that not fixing the defects would hinder any effort in reducing my pain. In December 2010, Dr. Goldstein performed the revised vulvar vestibulectomy at George Washington University Hospital in Washington, D.C. Once again, the surgery did not help ease my pain. It only increased my burning pain and the rectal pain just after surgery was off the charts painful.
At this point, I felt hopeless. I was in so much pain it was hard to think straight. I was afraid to go to any doctor so for months I just continued suffering with my pain.
In October 2011, I found Dr. Robert Echenberg in Bethlehem, PA. He confirmed my diagnosis of Pudendal Neuralgia and also diagnosed me with Interstitial Cystitis. He started me on oral medications, topical ointments, pudendal nerve blocks and bladder instillations. The bladder instillations were successful. However after months of pudendal nerve blocks, with no relief, he referred me to Dr. Mark Conway for a surgery. In July 2012, I had the Transgluteal Approach Pudendal Nerve Decompression Surgery.
It has been a very long road. I am almost nine months out from surgery in July 2012 and I still have an unbearable amount of vulvar burning pain. Unfortunately, after surgery I now have tailbone/SI Joint pain. Dr. Echenberg and my physical therapist referred me to Dr. Jean Santo of Advanced Pain Care Management for my tailbone/SI Joint pain. She ordered an MRI. The results showed inflammation and arthritis in my SI Joints. She said it is extremely rare for someone my age (I’m 41 years old) to have arthritis in the SI Joints. Dr. Santo performed an SC Joint injection in March. It made my tailbone completely numb, but my pudendal burning pain and SI Joint pain hindered me from enjoying the numb feeling of my tailbone. I am scheduled for SI Joint injections in April.
Dr. Santo recognized the complexity of my condition for which I am extremely grateful. She asked if I was familiar with intrathecal pain pumps and I immediately told her yes as it was the number one question on my list to ask her. She felt given my condition, all that I had been through and all of the medication I’m taking yet still in a tremendous amount of pain, that I was a good candidate for an intrathecal pain pump. She personally called a specialist at Hershey Medical Center to discuss my condition so I now have an appointment with Dr. Gordin at Hershey in April. I am being cautiously optimistic. I have learned a lot over the years and one is to listen to your gut when it’s telling you something. I did not always do so. I immediately trusted Dr. Santo and feel this new door has been opened for a reason so I am going to follow it. It feels right to me.
The life I lead right now is not living. I am unable to sit at all. I only leave our house for doctor appointments as it’s very painful to ride in a vehicle. I must lie in the back seat when traveling. I am unable to walk any distance and need the assistance of a cane to do so. I haven’t been able to work since May 2012. I am unable to attend any of my son’s school or sporting events. My everyday life has been severely altered. I think of all the things I took for granted for so many years and I miss all of those things terribly.
I am no longer searching for a cure, but I continue searching for something that will provide me with some pain relief. I would be so happy just to be able to walk around the block. I’d love to go out to eat with my family. I’d love to lie down at night and just fall asleep. I’d love to wake up feeling healthy. I want to have functionality back in my life. I was finally approved for social security disability after being denied the first time. I had an attorney for the appeal. It was difficult to accept the fact I needed disability, but the reality is I am disabled. This condition has affected not only me, but my family as well. I would be dishonest if I didn’t say I have days when I feel like all hope is lost, when I am blinded with pain and unable to move without crying. Regardless, I continue to have hope.
I thought it might be helpful to list all of the things I have tried and/or currently use(d) in case anyone has a question about any.
• Vulvar Vestibuletomy’s (original, plus revision)
• Hysterectomy (resulted in two additional surgeries and a catheterization to block bleeding artery)
• Emotional Therapist to help deal living life with chronic pain
• CT Guided Nerve Block
• Muscle Activation Technique
• Acupuncture
• Meditation
• White noise/Soothing Sounds
• Pudendal Nerve Blocks
• Trigger Point Injections
• Bladder Instillations
• Colonoscopy
• PN Decompression Surgery
• Oral Medication: Oxycontin, Percocet, Ultram, Neurontin, Elmiron, Hydroxyzine HCL, Klonopin, Ambien, Linzess, Senna, Prelief, Nortriptyline (no longer taking it)
• Topical Medications
• Physical Therapy
• Aquatics Therapy
• MRI
• SC Joint Injection
• SI Joint Injections
I’d also like to mention that prior to the onset of my condition I rarely took any type of medication. I didn’t even like taking an aspirin unless absolutely necessary. I had both of my children without any type of medication. I only mention this to let everyone know how high of a tolerance to pain I had. It still amazes me when I look at the amount of medications I take, treatments as well as surgeries and their inability to ease my pain on a regular basis.
I wish I had been diagnosed correctly from the start and maybe things would be different for me now. However, I’ve learned not to dwell on the past. I cannot change my choices so I must move forward with hope of one day finding a treatment that will help ease my pain. I am looking forward to meeting with Dr. Gordin to see if I am, in fact, a candidate for an intrathecal pain pump.
Thank you to all of you for bearing with me through my long story. I am so thankful to Pudendal Hope. Although I only recently registered, I’ve been following for quite a while now. Pain is a very lonely, dark place but Pudendal Hope truly brings hope during those times.
If anyone has suggestions of treatments other than what I have currently had, please let me know.
Jen