Affiliation:
1. University of Iowa Hospital, Iowa City, Iowa
Abstract
Pudendal nerve entrapment (PNE) is an uncommon cause of chronic pain. Pudendal nerve
entrapment typically occurs when the pudendal nerve is fused to nearby anatomical
structures or trapped between the sacrotuberous and sacrospinalis ligaments. Pudendal nerve
entrapment can be caused by excessive bicycling, pregnancy, anatomic abnormalities, scarring
due to surgery, or as a sequela of radiation therapy. Radiation-induced peripheral neuropathy
is usually chronic, progressive, and often irreversible. Radiation-induced pudendal neuropathy
is much less common than the more familiar brachial plexopathy secondary to radiation
treatment for breast cancer. The prevalence of PNE, however, is increasing due to improved
long-term cancer survival.
Diagnosis of pudendal neuralgia is essentially clinical; no specific clinical signs or complementary
tests are reliably confirmatory.
A detailed pain history with correlative clinical examination is paramount for accurate diagnosis.
Performance of a pudendal nerve block can serve as both a diagnostic and therapeutic tool.
Utilization of various imaging studies, as well as the performance of an electrophysiological
study with pudendal nerve motor latency testing, may yield valuable evidence in support of a
pudendal neuralgia diagnosis.
We present the case of a 59-year-old man with stage IV prostate cancer, referred to the pain
clinic for chronic perineal and right sided pelvic pain. His pain began insidiously, approximately
2 months after undergoing radiation treatment and chemotherapy 3 years prior. He was
ultimately diagnosed as having a right sided pudendal entrapment neuropathy. His pain
was refractory to all conventional treatment modalities; therefore we decided to pursue
neuromodulation via a dorsal column spinal cord stimulator implant. Below, we describe the
decision making process for the diagnosis and treatment of his pudendal neuropathy.
Key words: Pudendal nerve entrapment, neuralgia, neuromodulation, spinal cord stimulation.
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
11 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献