View clinical trials related to Pudendal Neuralgia.
Filter by:To study the efficacy of adding Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) to selected physical therapy exercise program on pain in patients with pudendal neuralgia. Fifty-two male participants with chronic pudendal neuralgia (30-50 years) shared in this study. Methods: patients were assigned randomly into two groups equal in number; study and control groups with 26 patients in each. All patients were receiving the same physical therapy exercise program, in addition to the same prescribed analgesic medication. Patients in the study group received additional TENS therapy and those in the control group received sham TENS. Treatment was provided three sessions per week for twelve successive weeks. The participants underwent baseline and post treatment assessment for pain level as measured by three methods; Serum Cortisol Level (SCL), Daily Etodolac intake dose (DEID), and Numerical Pain Rating Scale (NPRS).
Fifty two male participants, 30-50 years old, suffering from chronic pudendal neuralgia were randomly assigned either into experimental group (26 patients) received TENS plus the traditional physical therapy program( including range of motion exercise, stretching exercise of obturator internus muscle, clam shell exercise, relaxation exercise and underwater exercise) 3 sessions per week for 8 successive weeks, or control group (26 patients) received only the traditional physical therapy exercise for the same period of time. Intensity of pain by Verbal rating scale (VRS) as well as Serum cortisol level (SCL)and Etodolac level intake are measured pre and post treatment.
Pudendal neuralgia is a frequent diagnosis in pain clinics. This perineal pain has devastating effects on patient's quality of life. Today, 30% of patients are refractory to pain management and surgical procedure. The neuropathic characteristics of the pain in these patients lead us to test the efficiency of spinal cord stimulation at conus medullaris level. In our published preliminary study involving 27 patients with refractory pudendal neuralgia, we demonstrated that 74% of patients implanted with stimulation electrodes at the conus medullaris responded to stimulation. The primary objective of the present trial is to assess through a randomized, parallel group design, the effectiveness of spinal cord stimulation at the conus medullaris using pentapolar surgical lead ((TM)Penta, St Jude medical ANS) versus medical treatment alone on sitting time in refractory pudendal neuralgia.
Pudendal neuralgia is a recent identified pathology, extremely invalidating, related to chronic pelvic entrapment. Nowadays, pudendal neuralgia can be treated with: - neuropathic pains treatment - specific kinesitherapy - Alcock's canal and sacrospinal ligament infiltrations under scan - with diagnostic block - local steroids injections - and surgical decompression of pudendal nerve with transrectal approach. Only surgery was validated after a randomised protocol studying surgery versus abstention, performed and published by the CHU de Nantes. Many techniques have been proposed for realization of pudendal nerve infiltrations. The results of these infiltrations have never been published, and no randomised study had ever evaluated those results, even at short-run. Very few randomized studies have validated steroids infiltrations techniques in canal syndrome neuropathies. The primary objective of the investigators phase IV trial is to evaluate the efficacy of three different types of pudendal nerve infiltrations in Alcock's canal and sacrospinal ligament: - group A: only local anesthetic (control arm) - group B: local anesthetics associated with local steroids - group C: local anesthetics associated with local steroids and important volumes of physiological serum