Pelvic Pain Diagnosis Treatment (Summary)
Pain Management Approach for Complex Pelvic Pain – Video Summary
Overview
This transcript captures a medical education session led by Dr. Stifferman (Speaker 1), focusing on a systematic approach to diagnosing and treating complex pelvic pain conditions, particularly in patients with hypermobility and related disorders.
Core Diagnostic Framework
Three-Category System
Dr. Stifferman organizes pain sources into three main categories:
- Primary Sources: Direct pain generators
- Endometriosis on bowel
- Sacroiliac joint instability
- Hip impingement
- Hernias
- Interstitial cystitis
- Secondary Sources: Conditions resulting from primary issues
- Piriformis syndrome
- Obturator internus hyperactivity
- Bursitis
- Pudendal entrapment
- Pelvic floor dystonia (often secondary to guarding)
- Sensitization Processes: Nervous system changes from chronic pain
- Sympathetically mediated pain (poorly localized, hard to describe)
- Autonomic dysfunction symptoms
- Emotional components due to fight-or-flight activation
Key Clinical Insights
Pelvic Floor Dysfunction
- Often secondary to other conditions causing guarding responses
- May persist even after primary condition is treated
- Requires addressing underlying causes for lasting improvement
Hypermobility and Joint Instability
- Sacroiliac joint hypermobility commonly presents as “stuck” joints
- Pain often occurs contralateral to dysfunction
- Diagnostic approach: Fill joints with fluid to temporarily stabilize and assess response
Hernias and Abdominal Pain
- ACNES (Abdominal Cutaneous Nerve Entrapment Syndrome): Nerve entrapment from tight abdominal muscles
- Hernias cause three types of pain:
- Abdominal wall pain from stretching
- Nerve irritation (genitofemoral, femoral, obturator)
- Visceral pain from compressed contents
Hip Pathology
- Labral tears: Must identify underlying cause (trauma, cam/pincer morphology, hypermobility)
- Treatment decision factors:
- Young patients with cartilage erosion: Surgical correction recommended
- Older patients: Conservative management with injections and optimization
- Hypermobility without impingement: Prolotherapy and rehabilitation
Treatment Approaches
Medications as Diagnostic Tools
- Anti-inflammatories/steroids: Test for inflammatory processes
- Sympathetic modulators (clonidine, propranolol, tizanidine): Test for autonomic dysfunction
- Response patterns guide treatment pathways
Injection Therapies
- Prolotherapy: Primary treatment for hypermobility
- Diagnostic blocks: Confirm pain sources before definitive treatment
- Sympathetic blocks: Three key locations for pelvic area:
- Lumbar sympathetic plexus (L2-3)
- Superior hypogastric plexus (L5)
- Ganglion impar (tailbone region)
Trigger Point Assessment
- Primary trigger points resolve permanently with treatment
- Recurring trigger points within two weeks indicate underlying pathology
- Muscle response patterns reveal guarding vs. dystonia vs. trigger points
Collaborative Care Team
Specialists Mentioned
- Dr. Nino (Rheumatologist): Autoimmune workups, MCAS, small fiber neuropathy, POTS
- Dr. Kane: Regenerative medicine and hypermobility treatments
- Vascular surgery: May-Thurner syndrome evaluation
Case Example: Psoriatic Enthesitis
- Pudendal neuralgia secondary to inflammatory thickening of sacrospinous ligament
- Responds to steroids (unusual for typical pudendal neuralgia)
- Requires systemic psoriatic arthritis treatment
Treatment Philosophy
“Reverse Engineering” Approach
- Start by reducing overall sensitization (“knock down the flames”)
- Identify remaining active focal sources (“find what’s still burning”)
- Address cascade of compensatory patterns
- Iterative process requiring multiple visits and assessments
Patient Education Component
- Train patients to understand their pain patterns
- Develop awareness of primary vs. secondary vs. sensitization processes
- Enable better reporting of treatment responses
Multidisciplinary Integration
- Pain psychology for coping strategies and care coordination
- Physical therapy for biomechanical retraining
- Nutritional medicine for anti-inflammatory approaches
- Careful medication management avoiding long-term opioids
Key Clinical Pearls
- Always ask “why”: Don’t just treat symptoms; identify underlying causes
- Pattern recognition: Constellation of muscle activation reveals underlying joint dysfunction
- Diagnostic hierarchy: Address unstable pelvic ring before other treatments
- Avoid releasing compensatory mechanisms: Tight muscles may be providing necessary stability
- EDS considerations: Surgical interventions often contraindicated; focus on stabilization
This systematic approach emphasizes thorough evaluation, understanding of pain mechanisms, and coordinated multidisciplinary care for complex chronic pain conditions.
