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Neuropathic pain after neurectomy
You may remember me, I’ve had two hernia surgeries on the same side and have been doing a lot better since the second one, which was 21 months ago.
The mesh that was implanted in the first surgery caused fibrosis in the n. ilioinguinalis which was neurectomized along with removing the mesh. Since then, I’m pain free while resting and mostly pain free while active. However one thing that still elicits very strong pain is touching the affected area, which is especially distressing considering where it is and that the nerve damage also affects pubic hair. Note that touching also means clothes touching it and to some extent bowel movements (the mesh was a UHS which has a preperitoneal part).
My question is, to doctors and patients who have experience with this, does additional surgery promise improvement? (I would assume neurosurgery, since there is no recurrence and hardly any nociceptive pain).
I’m already waiting for appointments at a pain management clinic and a surgical clinic, only for consultation for now. However, I’m not even sure where to begin exactly. I highly doubt the average, or even above average, hernia surgeon can help me with this and my trust of doctors has become very low in general. If anything, the only thing that makes sense to me is neurosurgery, however none of the websites of neurosurgical clinics I could find in Germany talked about hernias at all. Neuropathic pain in general yes, but never specific to hernias. Pain management seems like the least risky option, but obviously fixing the underlying problem would be ideal.
- This discussion was modified 3 years, 11 months ago by Ben999.
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