Guest guest Posted August 19, 2007 Report Share Posted August 19, 2007 Yes... My diagnostis was vestibulitis but I had 24/7 pain. And I really questioned this, because I thought if you had 24/7 pain that meant you had DV. But I was told that if your pain is confined to the vestibule (as mine was) it's vestibulitis. DV--I was told--means pain in a larger area. The thing that most worsened my pain was sitting for a long time. I did ultimately have surgery anf when I did, I was told that my diagnosis may have been off. Vestibulitis is defined as " primary " (you know you have it from first sexual encounter) or " secondary " (you've had painfree sex UNTIL you get it). Before the pain nightmare started for me, I hadn't had a lot of sex in my life, but I'd had some. I would not have called it painful, but it was never totally comfortable. So... Was I a primary or a secondary? I don't know. The only reason it matters is that some docs think primary v patients have the best results from the surgery. Lia > Lia-- > > Thank you for sharing this. It really helps. I am just in that place > where I am hanging on and just trying to make it to the next day with > this.... > > I refused the tricyclics for a long time but I think I am going to > give them a try. After 2 years of 24/7 pain, I'm up for anything, > except surgery. > > I think I am realizing that no one thing is going to be the fix, so > like you said I'm trying to be patient at this point and put all the > pieces together. > > One more question for you---you say you were dxed with > vestibulitis....did you have 24/7 pain but only in the vestibule? That > is what I have... > > > > > > > I had a really long road, but I am doing really well now. I really > think you have to be > > patient and pushy (as contradictory as that sounds). Give > treatments a chance, but don't > > be bullied by doctors who say you're out of options. Doctors, in my > experience, don't like > > to seem ignorant, so they'll sooner say " there are no other > treatments " than " there are > > options I just don't know about. " In my case, there was not one > treatment that did the > > trick--I needed a combination. My onset was a common one: a year of > repeated infections > > (yeast and bv) that were treated with topical meds that I think did > me harm. When I finally > > got diagnosed, my diagnosis was vestibulitis, but I had 24/7 pain. > Tricyclic > > antidepressants made a big difference for me in terms of 24/7 pain > (elavil particularly), > > but didn't help contact pain. So I actually got to a point where I > was on a tricyclic and > > pretty comfortable as long as I didn't have sex. So I had a > vestibulectomy (after getting a > > couple opinions) and the surgery enabled me to have sex w/o pain. > BUT... at the end of all > > of this (3+ years) my pelvic muscles were in really bad spasm. So I > did a lot of PT and I am > > actually still doing it. That I am still doing PT is my fault, > really. After I worked on my > > pelvic muscles in PT I was told I really had tp strengthen the > surrounding muscle groups-- > > abs, butt, lower back--to keep my pelvis happy, and I have been lazy > about doing that. So > > I went back to pt recently to try and work on this. I have some > issues with pain after sex > > (not immediately, but like a day or 2 later) which I'm trying to > sort out. But sex itself is not > > painful and I feel like this after-pain is something I can figure > out and manage. If you're > > feeling hopeless... This is just my opinion, but I think it's really > important to do these > > things if you can: See a vulvar specialist, see a pt with > experience in vulvar pain, join the > > NVA. It's like $40 and you get a doctor list and a support contact > in your area and a really > > informative newsletter. Don't give up and try (I know it's hard) > not to sink into despair > > because I really think it worsens pain. > > > > Lia > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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