Hi there kahluamaria,
Welcome to HOPE, although sorry that you are having such a disturbingly bad time, prompting you to find us.
I have never heard of any correlation between cymbalta and PGAD but I may have missed that one somewhere along the line.Anyone else??
Anyway you have already discounted any connection as far as you are concerned.
I have heard that tramadol can help this particular symptom (slow release in particular) I have never really monitored this properly myself, although I do take tramadol; my PGAD is fairly indiscriminate (not too persistent thankfully) and not that troublesome.
If this is pudendal related, and it could well be,try not sitting,as much as possible. If you give this a good try (more difficult than it sounds) it could help quite a lot and hopefully fairly quickly.
Have a look on the home page under physiotherapists and see if there are any pelvic PN aware ones near you. A pelvic evaluation would give answers to any muscle related pelvic floor problems. Particularly tight muscles and/or trigger points may give a clue as to 'why' and also a way forward with treatment. Many people find that this is all that is needed, hopefully you will too. ,The combination of an anti seizure and anti-depressant (yes like cymbalta

) is often a good way to tackle any nerve related problems and can make a difference especially with nerve pain and may be worth a try although I think I am suggesting this more as a guard against any escalation in the problem.
Personally I would hold off on any medication and try the NOT sitting and book a pelvic physiotherapy session first, hope they help but then try some medication if needed a bit later. Again you can find a lot of info on this on the home page.
The only other advice is, try ice. . . . . Some people fill condoms with a small amount of alcohol and water combination for a more slushy frozen result, but this easy treatment option can really help .
Hope things calm down soon. Let us know how you are
Take care,
helen
Fall 2008. Misdiagnosed with lumber spine problem. MRN June 2010 indicated pudendal entrapment at Alcocks canal. Diagnosed with complex variant piriformis syndrome with sciatic, pudendal and gluteal entrapment's by Dr Filler 2010.Guided piriformis botox injection 2011 Bristol. 2013, Nerve conduction test positive; new spinal MRI scan negative, so diagnosed for the 4th time with pelvic nerve entrapment, now recognised as Sciatic, pudendal, PFCN and cluneal nerves at piriformis level.