nonsequitur wrote:But Violet for all of us it started with a small accident. It is what Dr. Echenberg says.
I fell. It should have healed in 3 days. Instead I had 11 years of pain.
Somebody on the forum coughed and had PN pain from then on. It should have healed in a few hours.
Somebody carried a coffee table and had PN pain from then on. It should have healed in a few days.
Somebody fell from a couch and had PN pain from then on. It should have healed in a 3 days.
Somebody had sex while not fully erect and had PN pain from then on. It should have healed in a few hours.
The pain is then maintained by the brain because of emotional trauma. Mind and body. Body and mind.
Therefore it is useless to have PT, Injections, surgery in many (most?) cases.
Heal the mind, not the body. The body has repaired itself a long time ago.
Watch the videos Dr. Echenberg posted. He has one from Dr. Peter Levine. Dr. Levine is all about pain from emotional trauma.
Dr. Echenberg wrote:
"The mind is an important factor in chronic pain and other stress and stress-related disorders".
Stress and stress-related disorders. Hmmm! Pretty close to what I wrote and that you found so offensive.
http://www.instituteforwomeninpain.com/ ... connection
Nonsequitur, I completely agree your quote from Dr. Echenberg and with everything you have said in your most recent post. I do not find the theory about the mindbody connection offensive.
The two things I find offensive are as follows:
1. The argument made earlier in this thread that PNE does not exist or is a bogus diagnosis.
2. That PGAD or PN/PNE is an anxiety disorder. That may be true in some cases of PGAD and chronic pelvic pain, but to say it is true in all cases is offensive.
In addition to what you posted from Dr. Echenberg's site, he also says the following:
"Pudendal nerve pain (neuralgia) may occur when the nerve is injured, inflamed, compressed, restricted, or "trapped"."
Chronic pelvic pain conditions are not necessarily stress related disorders. Dr. Echenberg's website backs me up on this.
http://instituteforwomeninpain.org/comm ... treatments. I believe there are various causes of chronic pelvic pain with pudendal nerve entrapment being one of them. So back to the original topic of this thread -- I am refuting the statements made by some posters that based on the article posted at the beginning of this thread, that PNE is not a legitimate diagnosis or doesn't exist.
The reality is, there is a stigma associated with being a psychiatric patient. Check out this article.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1489832/ Based on this reality, it is understandable that people would find it offensive to be told they have a psychiatric condition when they don't.
Susanjane wrote:Violet said,
"That's completely different than telling someone they are a headcase from the outset ........"
Susanjane wrote:Would any doctor actually say this to a patient quite so bluntly?
Thank goodness the psychiatrist I saw wasn't so insensitive. SJ
Susan, no, I doubt they would use the exact words "you are a headcase."

The neurologist I saw told me to go see a psychiatrist because she found no "medical" explanation for my symptoms. I guess to me that was the same as concluding I was a psychiatric case rather than a medical case. Experiences similar to this are common for chronic pelvic pain and PGAD patients.
Violet
PNE since 2002. Started from weightlifting. PNE surgery from Dr. Bautrant, Oct 2004. Pain now is usually a 0 and I can sit for hours on certain chairs. No longer take medication for PNE. Can work full time and do "The Firm" exercise program. 99% cured from PGAD. PNE surgery was right for me but it might not be for you. Do your research.