Surgery Success Rate
Posted: Fri Nov 21, 2014 6:34 am
I was diagnosed by 5 doctors with PNE and I had 2 failed PNE surgeries. My first surgery was in 2010 and the second one in 2011.
I did surgery because I was desperate. I had suffered since 2002. 100 sessions of PT did nothing. Botox sent me to the ER. The only thing left was surgery. I really wanted to believe in that MRN. Both the 3T MRI and MRN came back positive for PNE which was what convinced me to go for PNE surgery. In reality, I was simply grasping at straws.
Now that I have recovered 100% due to my mindbody practice, I can look back a bit more serenely at surgery to cure chronic pelvic pain.
I think we are far from the 60-100% success rate advertised by the PNE surgeons themselves.
Here is what I found:
1) I recently compiled my emails dating back to 2004 from PNE patients that had decompression surgery (patients from Tipna, Pudendal, Pudendalhope, and from the Headache in the Pelvis retreat). Among all those connections, I selected only people with whom I kept in touch for more than 2 months. With most of these people, I was communicating both before and after their surgeries.
Overall it is a group of 22 patients that had PNE surgery. My statistics show that only 13.5% of them benefited from surgery.
- 4 Nantes, 3 Aix, 5 Houston, 4 Baltimore, 4 Santa Monica, 1 Vienna, 4 Phoenix -yes, more than 22, I am counting re-dos.
- 14 F / 8 M
It is not scientific of course but those are real numbers (if you believe I am being truthful).
2) I analyzed the success stories on PudendalHope. There are 64 threads in the “SUCCESS STORIES” section. Only 19 of those 64 threads are success stories that have been posted by patients that claimed surgery made them much better or cured them.
It is a select group of people that were very excited about their surgery success and wanted to share the good news with the rest of us. You would expect these people for the most part to remain pain free or close to pain free.
I did a careful analysis of the subsequent posts from that select group of patients. Unfortunately, only 31.5% of them remained much better or cured. 68.5% of them relapsed or drifted back to a non-satisfactory level of pain.
So if among a select group of people that reported a successful surgery outcome, only 31.5% remain pain free or close to pain free, the real surgery success rate for all classes of patients must be between 0% and 31.5%. Is my 13.5% success rate so unbelievable then?
If my 13.5% is not too far from reality, think twice before going down the surgery route.
I know the sample is small and this is not scientific but where are the 60-100% of patients cured or significantly better?
I am not implying that PNE does not exist. All I am saying is that PNE is way way over-diagnosed and the access to surgery is offered in a shockingly casual manner.
A long car ride, sexual activity, or a fall does not start PNE. It is just so improbable. We go through sports in high school and college without a problem. Suddenly an incident triggers years of suffering like we never had before. Really...?
If you want PNE decompression surgery, you will get it. To see people get thrown on the conveyor belt to surgery by “PN aware” doctors is pretty disturbing when you realize the miserly success rate of such invasive procedure.
I did surgery because I was desperate. I had suffered since 2002. 100 sessions of PT did nothing. Botox sent me to the ER. The only thing left was surgery. I really wanted to believe in that MRN. Both the 3T MRI and MRN came back positive for PNE which was what convinced me to go for PNE surgery. In reality, I was simply grasping at straws.
Now that I have recovered 100% due to my mindbody practice, I can look back a bit more serenely at surgery to cure chronic pelvic pain.
I think we are far from the 60-100% success rate advertised by the PNE surgeons themselves.
Here is what I found:
1) I recently compiled my emails dating back to 2004 from PNE patients that had decompression surgery (patients from Tipna, Pudendal, Pudendalhope, and from the Headache in the Pelvis retreat). Among all those connections, I selected only people with whom I kept in touch for more than 2 months. With most of these people, I was communicating both before and after their surgeries.
Overall it is a group of 22 patients that had PNE surgery. My statistics show that only 13.5% of them benefited from surgery.
- 4 Nantes, 3 Aix, 5 Houston, 4 Baltimore, 4 Santa Monica, 1 Vienna, 4 Phoenix -yes, more than 22, I am counting re-dos.
- 14 F / 8 M
It is not scientific of course but those are real numbers (if you believe I am being truthful).
2) I analyzed the success stories on PudendalHope. There are 64 threads in the “SUCCESS STORIES” section. Only 19 of those 64 threads are success stories that have been posted by patients that claimed surgery made them much better or cured them.
It is a select group of people that were very excited about their surgery success and wanted to share the good news with the rest of us. You would expect these people for the most part to remain pain free or close to pain free.
I did a careful analysis of the subsequent posts from that select group of patients. Unfortunately, only 31.5% of them remained much better or cured. 68.5% of them relapsed or drifted back to a non-satisfactory level of pain.
So if among a select group of people that reported a successful surgery outcome, only 31.5% remain pain free or close to pain free, the real surgery success rate for all classes of patients must be between 0% and 31.5%. Is my 13.5% success rate so unbelievable then?
If my 13.5% is not too far from reality, think twice before going down the surgery route.
I know the sample is small and this is not scientific but where are the 60-100% of patients cured or significantly better?
I am not implying that PNE does not exist. All I am saying is that PNE is way way over-diagnosed and the access to surgery is offered in a shockingly casual manner.
A long car ride, sexual activity, or a fall does not start PNE. It is just so improbable. We go through sports in high school and college without a problem. Suddenly an incident triggers years of suffering like we never had before. Really...?
If you want PNE decompression surgery, you will get it. To see people get thrown on the conveyor belt to surgery by “PN aware” doctors is pretty disturbing when you realize the miserly success rate of such invasive procedure.