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Entraptment is part of the anatomy of almost all women...

Posted: Sat Mar 05, 2016 7:22 am
by bma
There are many causes for neuropathic pain. An attached nerve to nerve connective tissue may simply be normal. But perhaps surgery to create a better environment than the natural.

"Thirteen female cadavers (26 hemipelvises) were examined. A single pudendal nerve trunk was identified in 61.5% of hemipelvises. The median distance from the point of the pudendal nerve formation to the ischial spine was 27.5 mm (range, 14.5–37 mm). The width of the pudendal nerve in the pelvis was 4.5 mm (range, 2.5–6.3 mm). The length of the pudendal canal was 40.5 mm (range, 20.5–54.5 mm). The inferior rectal nerve was noted to enter the pudendal canal in 42.3% of hemipelvises; in these cases, the nerve exited the canal at a distance of 32.5 mm (range, 16–45 mm) from the ischial spine. In the remaining specimens, the inferior rectal nerve passed behind the sacrospinous ligament and entered the ischioanal fossa without entering the pudendal canal. In all specimens, the pudendal nerve was fixed by connective tissue to the dorsal surface of the sacrospinous ligament."

"Great variability exists in pudendal nerve anatomy. Fixation of the pudendal nerve to the dorsal surface of the sacrospinous ligament is a consistent finding; thus, pudendal neuralgia attributed to nerve entrapment may be overestimated. "

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26070708

Re: Entraptment is part of the anatomy of almost all women..

Posted: Sat Mar 05, 2016 1:17 pm
by nyt
Thank you for posting this. We had considerable discussion and debate in regards to this paper when it was first published. Below is the link to the thread:

http://www.pudendalhope.info/forum/view ... =23&t=6780