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Treatment
 

Six-Day Comprehensive Pelvic Pain Intensive Clinics for the Stanford Treatment Protocol

Chronic pelvic pain syndromes have been a puzzle to the best medical minds for a century. Antibiotics, anti-inflammatories, prostate massage, and surgical procedures, which form the backbone of traditional treatments, have been of little use in dealing with these debilitating afflictions. In A Headache in the Pelvis, we describe a new treatment protocol developed over a period of 8 years at Stanford University’s Department of Urology that has stepped out of the box of conventional medical treatment. It involves a treatment that has been successful in substantially abating or resolving the symptoms of pain and dysfunction in a select group of patients with chronic pelvic pain syndromes. This protocol is based on a new understanding that chronic pelvic pain syndromes are not caused by prostate or organ pathology but instead by a chronically contracted pelvic floor that has made an inhospitable environment for the organs and tissues found within it.

The Stanford Protocol involves the coordinated treatment of a physician, psychologist, and physical therapist. Successful results are dependent upon the willingness of the patient to actively comply with the regimen described in A Headache in the Pelvis for an extended period of time. This is in contrast to the conventional form of medical treatment which looks to a quick solution by drugs or surgery with minimal participation of the patient. The solution to this vexing condition is neither quick nor easy and requires a large expenditure of effort. Our patients are typically people who have had pain and dysfunction for years, have seen numerous doctors, and have unsuccessfully used the conventional treatments.

We have established these monthly 6 day clinics to allow us to treat in a 6 day period patients who live far away. They are the most effective and comprehensive form of the treatment available described in A Headache in the Pelvis.

Perhaps the greatest suffering for patients with pelvic pain syndromes is the sense of helplessness that patients feel in the presence of their pelvic pain and dysfunction. We are not able to help everyone we treat. When we are successful in helping people with this problem, we are able to give them tools to reduce or abate their symptoms. When the treatment is successful and participants comply with the home practice portion of the protocol, some clear reduction of symptoms is usually seen within a period of three to four months. Stable reduction or resolution of symptoms can take several years and in many individuals who respond to our treatment, improvement continues with the use of the protocol.

These clinics train participants to do self-treatment at home. They are done in a small group and consist of approximately 20-30 hours of treatment over the period of 6 days. The content of the workshops consists of:

  • Individual medical evaluations are done in the department of Urology at Stanford University or at a participating urologist’s office prior to the intensive program, at which time the nature of the condition of the participants will be evaluated and the appropriateness of the treatment protocol determined. **
  • Training in Paradoxical Relaxation is done over a period of 6 days. A yearlong 46 lesson audio course in Paradoxical Relaxation is an integral part of the Stanford Protocol and instruction during the clinic is geared to training participants to use the recorded lessons of the course at home. Specific cognitive strategies for reducing the impact of frequent negative/catastrophic thinking that accompanies chronic pelvic pain syndromes are part of the curriculum.
  • Participants undergo a specific form of physical therapy consisting of pelvic floor related Stanford Protocol Trigger Point Release developed for chronic pelvic pain syndromes and physical therapy self-treatment instruction on a daily basis. When a partner is available and willing, the partner receives instruction in the Trigger Point Release geared to the treatment requirements of their partner. Willing partners who come for training in Trigger Point Release are strongly encouraged to attend the physical therapy sessions. This attendance and instruction of partners is included as part of the clinic . The intention of this training is to train participants to self-administer the physical therapy component of treatment at home on a regular basis. Patients receive a map of their trigger points and areas of restriction.
  • Participants receive information and recommendations on different aspects of treatment of pelvic pain. This information includes relevant educational material describing the physiology, anatomy, and psychology accompanying chronic pelvic pain syndromes. It includes specific stretches, referred to as pelvic floor yoga, recommendations about diet, exercise, and sexual activity. Instruction in appropriate self-administered Trigger Point Therapy is an important part of the curriculum.

Medical evaluation is done by Dr. Rodney Anderson at Stanford University or other participating urologists in the San Francisco Bay Area. The Paradoxical Relaxation training is conducted by Dr. David Wise and the Myofascial/Trigger Point Release is conducted by senior physical therapists trained in the Stanford protocol at a site about an hour north of San Francisco.

** In the event the treatment protocol is not deemed to be appropriate at the time of the evaluation, other treatment options will be discussed, and the participant will only be charged for the cost of the medical visit. Both the relaxation training and physical therapy are done on site in Santa Rosa California and have no medical/financial relationship with Stanford as participants come to Stanford for the urologic evaluation alone.



Six-Day Intensive Pelvic Pain Clinics
Northern California 2008

2008
January
24 - 29
February
21 - 26
March
27 - April 1
April
24 - 29
May
15 - 20
June
12 - 17
July
17 - 22
August
21 - 26
September
18 - 23
October
23 - 28
November
20 - 25
December
11 - 16


For information and registration
phone: 1 866 874 2225 (toll free)
1 707 874 2225

 
National Center for Pelvic Pain Research, Box 54, Occidental, California 95465
• Telephone: 707 874 2225 • Fax: 707 874 2335
Email: ahip@sonic.net, Privacy Policy