Symptomatic approach to musculoskeletal dysfunction and chronic pelvic and perineal pain

Clinical examination of a patient with chronic pelvic and perineal pain often demonstrates muscle hypertonia or muscle contracture sometimes associated with local tenderness or real muscle trigger points. It is sometimes very difficult to determine whether this muscle pain detected on clinical exami...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progrès en urologie (Paris) 2010-11, Vol.20 (12), p.982-989
Hauptverfasser: Labat, J-J, Guerineau, M, Delavierre, D, Sibert, L, Rigaud, J
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container_issue 12
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creator Labat, J-J
Guerineau, M
Delavierre, D
Sibert, L
Rigaud, J
description Clinical examination of a patient with chronic pelvic and perineal pain often demonstrates muscle hypertonia or muscle contracture sometimes associated with local tenderness or real muscle trigger points. It is sometimes very difficult to determine whether this muscle pain detected on clinical examination is the cause or a consequence of the pain. The purpose of this article is to review musculoskeletal dysfunction in the context of chronic pelvic and perineal pain. Review of the literature devoted to musculoskeletal aspects of pelvic and perineal pain. Definitions of pelvic floor dysfunction, hyperactive pelvic floor, myofascial pain and muscle trigger points, and the concept of fibromyalgia. Musculoskeletal pain is certainly underestimated in the management of chronic pelvic and perineal pain. The pathophysiology of musculoskeletal pain involves disorders of the lumbar, pelvic and femoral equilibrium, myofascial pain characterized by the presence of trigger points for which the pathophysiology remains controversial: a purely muscle disease, reaction to adjacent inflammatory reactions causing hypersensitization, or simply a sign of central hypersensitization in a context of chronic pain syndrome.
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subjects Chronic Disease
Humans
Musculoskeletal Diseases - diagnosis
Musculoskeletal Diseases - physiopathology
Myofascial Pain Syndromes - diagnosis
Pelvic Pain - diagnosis
Pelvic Pain - physiopathology
Perineum
title Symptomatic approach to musculoskeletal dysfunction and chronic pelvic and perineal pain
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