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PN Diagnosis Decision Path
By Jack Harich - August
29, 2002

The above diagram summarizes current best
practices in diagnosis of PN to the PNE first surgery step,
using the Dr. Robert protocol. Please note this is a very
high level summary, and so omits many of the steps and questions
you will encounter with your doctors.
Nerve Blocks
Generally the first nerve block is at the
ischial spine, because this is the most common point
of entrapment. If the pain goes away then you can be 100%
sure the pain is from an area served by the nerve at or below
that point, or is from the nerve itself. To determine whether
it's the nerve or not, various tests to rule out non-PN causes
of pain must be done. These can be done before or after a
nerve block. The diagram shows them done before, since most
of these various tests are cheaper and more routine than a
nerve block. For example, my ischial spine nerve block in
Houston on March 18, 2002 cost $1,800.00. The same test in
Nantes at that time was about $350.00.
The ischial spine location has another advantage:
it's about as high as you can go on the pudendal nerve before
encountering the pudendal plexus. Above that, a nerve
block would be somewhat useless, since that's where the pudendal
nerve starts. See Pelvic
Wall Blood Vessels and Nerves for where the pudendal plexus
is.
If two or three nerve blocks with steroids
(also known as corticoids) fail to give lasting relief at
the ischial spine, the pudendal canal (Alcock's Canal)
is tried. Other locations may also be tried. Dr. Robert cautions
that:
"Two or three infiltrations
are performed [at a single location]; this number should
not be exceeded for fear of deterioration in the nerve trunk."
- Source: PNE by Dr. Robert.
If an ischial spine nerve block has no effect
on the pain, and the pain is in an area served by the pudendal
nerve below the block location, then either the block
was given incorrectly, or PN is not present. As Dr. Robert
wrote in an email to a patient:
"The main problem arises for
patients without any effect after blocks. I do believe that
then they are not candidates for surgery." - Source.
However, most rules have exceptions. In
a very small percentage of cases, a nerve block will not temporarily
reduce or eliminate PNE pain. This can occur when the pudendal
nerve has an unusual route, such the "rose petal"
shape Dr. Robert found in one patient. There can be other
reasons. Since even nerve blocks are not 100% reliable for
testing, diagnosis must rely on a suite of tests.
The PNLT
Of interest is the Pudendal Nerve Latency
Test (PNLT) is not required for diagnosis of Pudendal
Nerve Entrapment (PNE). I have confirmed this with Dr. Ken
Renney, who approved the following paragraph on June 17, 2002:
"If the PNLT tests high,
damage is evident and treatment is less likely to completely
cure the condition. If it tests medium, treatment
is much more likely to be effective since less damage is
present. If it tests normal, treatment has excellent
potential, since motor latency damage has not yet occurred."
This assumes, of course, that the PNLT is
administered correctly. It is a difficult test to do correctly,
so that the results can be reliably compared to standard results.
According to Dr. Ken Renney (as of June, 2002), only two doctor
teams in the world are trained to do the PNLT correctly: the
Nantes and Houston teams. All others use what Ken calls the
"classical" technique which does not get "good
waveforms." This may change in the future.
The value of the PNLT lies in confirming
(a second indication) that pudendal nerve damage is present
and how much. This gives the surgeon a strong clue of what
to look for when they get inside. Multiple indications are
much more reliable than a single indication.
The quote about PNLT outcomes should help
to convince you to seek diagnosis and treatment immediately,
before further damage occurs. It should also convince you
to avoid making your condition worse.
Confirmation Tests
If the same team of doctors that will be
doing the surgery has been doing the preliminary tests, there
may be no need for final confirmation tests. This is the case
for the team of Dr. Robert (really Professor Robert), Dr.
Labat, and Dr. Bensignor, because they confer closely during
the diagnosis stage. However, if you are in the US and get
your initial nerve block(s) there, confirmation testing is
done in France. This allows the French doctors to proceed
with confidence and more complete knowledge.
Also, if the team doing the surgery trusts
previous tests, they may proceed with surgery with no additional
tests.
The rest of the diagram is self explanatory.
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