TG Approach - glutes not cut
Posted: Sat Aug 31, 2013 7:35 pm
Here is an e-mail conversation I had with a patient. He gave me permission to post it.
Patient:
I have had two decompression surgery. One at Hospital for SpeciaL Surgery (NYC) and very recently at Columbia Presbyterian (NYC).
I had a large bone spur presing on the Pudendal nerve. The spur was entangled in the sacro tuberous ligament. However we did no know that until the first surgery which used the gluteal fols as an entry point.
My key point is the surgeon who preformed the second surgery. He used a trans guteal approach BUT did not cut the muscles. He was able to retract the muscle exposing the ligament. alcocks canal and the pudendal and sciatic nerves. Because he didn't cut the muscle I was able to leave the hospital THE SAME DAY... Very little pain and on the thrid day I drove my car..
After reading the long recovery following Roberts TG approach I was expecting a tough recovery.
Violet:
> Hello ________,
>
> Thank you for this valuable information. I hope you are feeling
>
> better now. Did you have both of your PNE surgeries with this
> team of
> doctors?
>
> If you would like to share your experience on the pudendalhope
> forum
> I'm sure there are patients from New York who would be interested.
>
> I would be interested to hear how things go for you.
>
> Best regards,
>
> Violet Matthews, Secretary
> Health Organization for Pudendal Education
Patient
The surgeons name is Dr Christopher Winfree. He can be contacted through Columbia NeuroSurgeons. He has offices in Ridgefield NJ and NYC.
He is truly a gifted surgeon. He works in tadem with Dr Francis Lee also NJ and NYC...
I can't say enough about how easy the recovery is... just amazing.
The first surgery was at Hospital for Special Surgery (NYC) by Dr Bryan Kelly. I had been working with an excellent Pain Management (diagnostian) Dr Daniel Richman (also HSS) who found a large bone spur
whose base was near the hamstring origin. Dr Kelly (hip Dr) postulated that it started from an undetected hamstring injury (I was a runner for 20+ yrs). So they thought they could go in through the fold where leg meets buttocks, fix the hamstring and remove the spur that was pressing on the nerve. When they got in, there was no hamstring problem and the tip of the spur was entangled in the sacro tuberous ligament.
So they took a wedge out of the spur base and tried to give room for the nerve. It provided some relief.
The second surgery was with Dr Winfree Neuro surgeon at Columbia Presbyterian (NYC) he was accompanied by Dr Francis Lee (Ortho)... That was done 8/1... I left the hospital the same day...
it is now 8/7 and I am dressing myself including shoes/socks, I can lift my thigh parallel with the floor with minor effort and I walk around with an almost unnoticed limp. The ONLY pain med I have taken in 3 Tylenol after the 1 1/2 hour car ride home..
After reading the long recovery stories about the Robert trans gluteal approach.. I wanted to get the word out to other sufferers that there is an alternative trans gluteal technique with significantly less recovery time, less surgical pain and time in hospital.
Dr Winfree is a very talented surgeon as is Dr Lee... I was lucky to find them....
Now the good news/ bad news Dr Winfree found the bone spur was only a secondary reason for the pain.
The primary reason are some veins that have deformed (think varicose veins) and are pressing on the pudendal and sciatic nerves. He had a vascular surgeon advise him NOT to try and cut them. But rather close me up and have an Interventional Radiologist do an embolizism on he veins which will cut off blood and they will shrink on there own... He used the word "bloodbath" if the veins were cut..
I've emailed with Dr winfree post-op and we're going formulate a plan to get that done asap.. When I'm in his office for the post-op follow up on 8/12...
I'm very confident by Christmas I will be pain free... as embolized veins take 4-6 weeks to shrink and be re-absorbed by the body...
I will try and get on the forum.. But I run two business and my days are quite full.
Please feel free to use this info on the forum
Patient:
I have had two decompression surgery. One at Hospital for SpeciaL Surgery (NYC) and very recently at Columbia Presbyterian (NYC).
I had a large bone spur presing on the Pudendal nerve. The spur was entangled in the sacro tuberous ligament. However we did no know that until the first surgery which used the gluteal fols as an entry point.
My key point is the surgeon who preformed the second surgery. He used a trans guteal approach BUT did not cut the muscles. He was able to retract the muscle exposing the ligament. alcocks canal and the pudendal and sciatic nerves. Because he didn't cut the muscle I was able to leave the hospital THE SAME DAY... Very little pain and on the thrid day I drove my car..
After reading the long recovery following Roberts TG approach I was expecting a tough recovery.
Violet:
> Hello ________,
>
> Thank you for this valuable information. I hope you are feeling
>
> better now. Did you have both of your PNE surgeries with this
> team of
> doctors?
>
> If you would like to share your experience on the pudendalhope
> forum
> I'm sure there are patients from New York who would be interested.
>
> I would be interested to hear how things go for you.
>
> Best regards,
>
> Violet Matthews, Secretary
> Health Organization for Pudendal Education
Patient
The surgeons name is Dr Christopher Winfree. He can be contacted through Columbia NeuroSurgeons. He has offices in Ridgefield NJ and NYC.
He is truly a gifted surgeon. He works in tadem with Dr Francis Lee also NJ and NYC...
I can't say enough about how easy the recovery is... just amazing.
The first surgery was at Hospital for Special Surgery (NYC) by Dr Bryan Kelly. I had been working with an excellent Pain Management (diagnostian) Dr Daniel Richman (also HSS) who found a large bone spur
whose base was near the hamstring origin. Dr Kelly (hip Dr) postulated that it started from an undetected hamstring injury (I was a runner for 20+ yrs). So they thought they could go in through the fold where leg meets buttocks, fix the hamstring and remove the spur that was pressing on the nerve. When they got in, there was no hamstring problem and the tip of the spur was entangled in the sacro tuberous ligament.
So they took a wedge out of the spur base and tried to give room for the nerve. It provided some relief.
The second surgery was with Dr Winfree Neuro surgeon at Columbia Presbyterian (NYC) he was accompanied by Dr Francis Lee (Ortho)... That was done 8/1... I left the hospital the same day...
it is now 8/7 and I am dressing myself including shoes/socks, I can lift my thigh parallel with the floor with minor effort and I walk around with an almost unnoticed limp. The ONLY pain med I have taken in 3 Tylenol after the 1 1/2 hour car ride home..
After reading the long recovery stories about the Robert trans gluteal approach.. I wanted to get the word out to other sufferers that there is an alternative trans gluteal technique with significantly less recovery time, less surgical pain and time in hospital.
Dr Winfree is a very talented surgeon as is Dr Lee... I was lucky to find them....
Now the good news/ bad news Dr Winfree found the bone spur was only a secondary reason for the pain.
The primary reason are some veins that have deformed (think varicose veins) and are pressing on the pudendal and sciatic nerves. He had a vascular surgeon advise him NOT to try and cut them. But rather close me up and have an Interventional Radiologist do an embolizism on he veins which will cut off blood and they will shrink on there own... He used the word "bloodbath" if the veins were cut..
I've emailed with Dr winfree post-op and we're going formulate a plan to get that done asap.. When I'm in his office for the post-op follow up on 8/12...
I'm very confident by Christmas I will be pain free... as embolized veins take 4-6 weeks to shrink and be re-absorbed by the body...
I will try and get on the forum.. But I run two business and my days are quite full.
Please feel free to use this info on the forum