Guest guest Posted September 4, 2007 Report Share Posted September 4, 2007 – you will be fine also!!! Have great faith in Dr. Conway – he is the best and you are so fortunate that you live in the area near him. I will be praying for you and sending good thoughts your way when you have your appointments. Have the EMG test plus the nerve blocks if needed. It will be all over in a couple of hours and it will give you the answers that you are looking for. Just don’t be afraid – you have the absolute best medical care imaginable. He is so kind – you are in great hands. nne From: VulvarDisorders [mailto:VulvarDisorders ] On Behalf Of Sales Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2007 10:59 AM To: VulvarDisorders Subject: Re: Life after VVS Surgery nne, I am sooooo happy that you have finally found some relief. That is wonderful news and you certainly deserve such wonderful results! Your story should provide hope to almost anyone out there with vulvar/pelvic pain timeflies <TIME-FLIES (AT) CHARTER (DOT) NET> wrote: Along with my pudendal nerve surgery, I ALSO had a vestibulectomy. It turned out perfect – all my surface pain is now gone – I no longer have to use Lidocaine, or any other numbing creams. (I have a medicine cabinet full) The vestibulectomy surgery was painless (less than two weeks ago). I can’t even feel where the stitching was done. The only reason I am mentioning this is to dispel all the awful vestibulectomy posts that have proliferated over the years. If you have VV pain, there is a solution – there is no reason to continue to suffer. It works – it really does. I don’t know how much stronger that I can write this. If you want to talk about it further, please don’t hesitate to email me privately. I can truly attest that this is a good surgery. In regards to my pudendal surgery, I will still have pain from Pudendal Neuropathy for a long time. Especially butt pain – I feel like I have been kicked by a horse!! Not from the surgery itself, but from the nerves healing. nne ----My situation is very much like yours. I had a partial vestibulectomy 4 years ago and I also have LS. I'm not perfect either but substantially improved! Sandy Luggage? GPS? Comic books? Check out fitting gifts for grads at Yahoo! Search. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 4, 2007 Report Share Posted September 4, 2007 nne, Thank you for your belief...i am praying that Dr. Conway can help. Although I am terribly afraid that these blocks and tests will make me worse, or not help at all, I feel that it is the next best step. I will keep you posted. timeflies wrote: – you will be fine also!!! Have great faith in Dr. Conway – he is the best and you are so fortunate that you live in the area near him. I will be praying for you and sending good thoughts your way when you have your appointments. Have the EMG test plus the nerve blocks if needed. It will be all over in a couple of hours and it will give you the answers that you are looking for. Just don’t be afraid – you have the absolute best medical care imaginable. He is so kind – you are in great hands. nne From: VulvarDisorders [mailto:VulvarDisorders ] On Behalf Of SalesSent: Tuesday, September 04, 2007 10:59 AMTo: VulvarDisorders Subject: Re: Life after VVS Surgery nne, I am sooooo happy that you have finally found some relief. That is wonderful news and you certainly deserve such wonderful results! Your story should provide hope to almost anyone out there with vulvar/pelvic pain timeflies <TIME-FLIES (AT) CHARTER (DOT) NET> wrote: Along with my pudendal nerve surgery, I ALSO had a vestibulectomy. It turned out perfect – all my surface pain is now gone – I no longer have to use Lidocaine, or any other numbing creams. (I have a medicine cabinet full) The vestibulectomy surgery was painless (less than two weeks ago). I can’t even feel where the stitching was done. The only reason I am mentioning this is to dispel all the awful vestibulectomy posts that have proliferated over the years. If you have VV pain, there is a solution – there is no reason to continue to suffer. It works – it really does. I don’t know how much stronger that I can write this. If you want to talk about it further, please don’t hesitate to email me privately. I can truly attest that this is a good surgery. In regards to my pudendal surgery, I will still have pain from Pudendal Neuropathy for a long time. Especially butt pain – I feel like I have been kicked by a horse!! Not from the surgery itself, but from the nerves healing. nne ----My situation is very much like yours. I had a partial vestibulectomy 4 years ago and I also have LS. I'm not perfect either but substantially improved! Sandy Luggage? GPS? Comic books? Check out fitting gifts for grads at Yahoo! Search. Be a better Heartthrob. Get better relationship answers from someone who knows.Yahoo! Answers - Check it out. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 4, 2007 Report Share Posted September 4, 2007 nne, Thank you for your belief...i am praying that Dr. Conway can help. Although I am terribly afraid that these blocks and tests will make me worse, or not help at all, I feel that it is the next best step. I will keep you posted. timeflies wrote: – you will be fine also!!! Have great faith in Dr. Conway – he is the best and you are so fortunate that you live in the area near him. I will be praying for you and sending good thoughts your way when you have your appointments. Have the EMG test plus the nerve blocks if needed. It will be all over in a couple of hours and it will give you the answers that you are looking for. Just don’t be afraid – you have the absolute best medical care imaginable. He is so kind – you are in great hands. nne From: VulvarDisorders [mailto:VulvarDisorders ] On Behalf Of SalesSent: Tuesday, September 04, 2007 10:59 AMTo: VulvarDisorders Subject: Re: Life after VVS Surgery nne, I am sooooo happy that you have finally found some relief. That is wonderful news and you certainly deserve such wonderful results! Your story should provide hope to almost anyone out there with vulvar/pelvic pain timeflies <TIME-FLIES (AT) CHARTER (DOT) NET> wrote: Along with my pudendal nerve surgery, I ALSO had a vestibulectomy. It turned out perfect – all my surface pain is now gone – I no longer have to use Lidocaine, or any other numbing creams. (I have a medicine cabinet full) The vestibulectomy surgery was painless (less than two weeks ago). I can’t even feel where the stitching was done. The only reason I am mentioning this is to dispel all the awful vestibulectomy posts that have proliferated over the years. If you have VV pain, there is a solution – there is no reason to continue to suffer. It works – it really does. I don’t know how much stronger that I can write this. If you want to talk about it further, please don’t hesitate to email me privately. I can truly attest that this is a good surgery. In regards to my pudendal surgery, I will still have pain from Pudendal Neuropathy for a long time. Especially butt pain – I feel like I have been kicked by a horse!! Not from the surgery itself, but from the nerves healing. nne ----My situation is very much like yours. I had a partial vestibulectomy 4 years ago and I also have LS. I'm not perfect either but substantially improved! Sandy Luggage? GPS? Comic books? Check out fitting gifts for grads at Yahoo! Search. Be a better Heartthrob. Get better relationship answers from someone who knows.Yahoo! Answers - Check it out. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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