Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Your messages sound like you are in the medical field. Are you a doctor or nurse or have a medical background? Vulvodynia is " pain in the vulva " http://www.vulvodynia.com So, if you have a yeast infection or bacteria or anything else that causes pain in the vulva, you have vulvodynia. It can be acute or chronic depending on cause. If you find a cure, then you no longer have vulvodynia. Using the definition above, Robin's yeast infection caused her vulvodynia. She was given that diagnosis from one of the top 3 vulvar specialists. I would hope he knows vulvodynia. I am not sure what your definition of vv/vvs is but if you mean vestibulitis (vv meaning vulvar vestibulitis or vvs meaning vulvar vestibulitis syndrome) then vv/vvs is a subset of vulvodynia (pain in the vulva)with pain at the opening of the vagina. This one is harder to cure/treat. However, many women have been cured both of Vulvodynia and Vestibulitis. This meaning, their symptoms went away and have not returned. Maybe some of our ideas of " curable " are different. To me it means that the problem goes away. If it goes away, than I consider it cured for as long as it is gone. The Websters dictionary says: " Cure: 1) A means to healing or restoring to health; remedy. 2) A method or course of remedial treatment as for disease. 3) Successful remedial treatment: restoration to health. " Everyone needs to have hope of a cure. We just have to find what the cure will be. Lynn <<You aren't looking in the right places. There have been quite a few that have been cured when treated for long term yeast.>> > Then the person did not have vv/vvs, the person had an yeast infection. > > > Debbie > Tiger Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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