The VerdictLOW CONVICTION

Pelvic pain that's worse sitting and never wakes you at night is usually a squeezed nerve, not damage.

Notice when your pain eases. If it's worse the longer you sit, eases when you stand or sit on a toilet seat, and never wakes you at night, that's the classic pudendal pattern. Take the pressure off the nerve today: stop sitting on hard flat surfaces, use a cut-out cushion, and ease off cycling.

  1. A nerve deep in your pelvis is compressed when you sit, which is why standing and toilet seats help and it doesn't wake you at night.
  2. The myth that won't die is doing Kegels. The muscles are usually already too tight, and squeezing them harder can make it worse.

Picture a garden hose pinched under a heavy chair leg. The pudendal nerve gets squeezed against the bones you sit on, so the longer you sit the more it complains, and standing lifts the chair leg off the hose. The fix isn't tightening the muscles around it (that pinches harder), it's taking the weight off and letting them relax.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Perineal / Pelvic — Pudendal Nerve (S2–S4)

Pudendal Neuralgia

A nerve-driven pain in the "saddle" area — perineum, genitals, and anus — that is classically worse when you sit and does not wake you at night. Also called pudendal nerve entrapment or Alcock's canal syndrome.

Conviction: Low–Moderate

What Works

The honest headline: the hard part of pudendal neuralgia is getting the diagnosis right, not picking a treatment. The evidence base is small. Conservative care is low-risk and comes first.

Dark cinematic anatomical rendering of pelvic floor and nerve

Tier 1 — First-line (strongest available, still moderate) MODERATE

Education + load modification + pelvic-floor down-training

  • Cut prolonged sitting, use a cut-out / ischial-relief cushion, manage constipation, and ease off or modify cycling.
  • Pelvic-floor physical therapy aimed at relaxation (down-training), not strengthening.

Exercise Prescription

Diaphragmatic (belly) breathing — breathe slowly into your belly and let the pelvic floor soften on the out-breath. 5–10 slow breaths, 2–3× daily. Should feel calming, never sharp.
Pelvic-floor "drop" / relaxation — with the breathing, focus on letting go and lengthening the muscles around the back passage and perineum. Do NOT squeeze. 5–8 gentle releases, daily.
Sitting-tolerance practice with a cushion — use a cut-out cushion and build sitting time gradually. As tolerated; stop before pain ramps up.
See Tier 2 & Tier 3 (medication, injections, refractory ladder)

Tier 2 — Medication & diagnostic block MODERATE

  • Neuropathic pain medication (gabapentinoids or tricyclics) from your doctor.
  • Image-guided pudendal nerve block — mainly confirms the diagnosis and gives short-term relief. Adding a steroid does not make it last longer.

Tier 3 — Refractory ladder LOW–MOD

  • Pulsed radiofrequency — roughly 3 months of relief, repeatable (small studies).
  • Neuromodulation (nerve stimulation) for refractory cases.
  • Surgical decompression — only for a confirmed, block-positive entrapment that has failed the steps above. The only treatment with a positive randomized trial, but that trial was tiny (16 vs 16).

What Doesn't Work

  • Kegels / strengthening a tight pelvic floor as a default — the floor is usually already over-tight, so squeezing can make it worse.
  • Adding corticosteroid to the nerve block for lasting relief — a blinded trial of 201 patients found no durable benefit over plain anaesthetic.
  • Jumping to decompression surgery on a "pudendal neuralgia" label alone — a large share of that label turns out not to be a true entrapment.

Return to Training

Most upper-body work, standing, and pain-free lifting can usually continue. Cut prolonged sitting and cycling, and avoid heavy breath-holding/straining while symptoms settle. Aim for these before fully loading again:

Red Flags — When to Get Checked

Pain in this area can come from serious causes. See a clinician before assuming it is a pinched nerve if you have any of these:

  • Numbness in the "saddle" area + new trouble controlling your bladder or bowels — possible cauda equina. This is an emergency.
  • Pain that wakes you from sleep — not typical for pudendal neuralgia; needs a work-up.
  • Numbness you can clearly feel on exam, unexplained weight loss, a lump, rectal bleeding, or fever — screen for tumor, infection, or bowel disease first.
  • Cyclical pelvic pain with a gynecological history — consider endometriosis.

Refer to: A&E immediately for suspected cauda equina (saddle numbness + retention). Otherwise GP, urology, gynecology, colorectal, or a pelvic-pain specialist, plus a pelvic-health physical therapist for conservative care.

Dark cinematic anatomical rendering of the pelvic nerve region

Notice when your pain eases. If it's worse the longer you sit, better when you stand or sit on a toilet seat, and never wakes you at night — that's the classic pattern. Take the pressure off today: stop sitting on hard flat surfaces, use a cut-out cushion, and ease off cycling.

Sitting compresses the nerve against the bones you sit on, so offloading it is the simplest first step that matches the cause. If you have saddle numbness or new bladder or bowel problems, skip the self-help and get urgent medical care.

Takes less than 2 minutes to set up. No equipment except a cushion.

Conviction LOW–MODERATE

The evidence is small, heterogeneous, and built mostly on case series plus a handful of small trials, and the 2025 meta-analysis concluded the best treatment approach is "unknown." Conservative-first care is low-risk and sensible. The single biggest issue is diagnostic: there is no validated test, and a meaningful share of "pudendal neuralgia" labels are something else.

What would change "conservative-first" to high confidence?

A multicentre trial of 200+ properly-diagnosed patients of both sexes, comparing structured pelvic-floor physical therapy against a nerve-block series and usual care, with lasting pain relief measured at 12 months.

What would settle the diagnosis problem?

A validated diagnostic-accuracy study giving a clear sensitivity/specificity for a clinical test cluster or MR neurography against a reliable reference standard.

Go Deeper

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The Full Picture — Anatomy, Diagnosis & Evidence

What's Actually Going On

The pudendal nerve comes off the S2–S4 nerve roots, passes between two pelvic ligaments at the ischial spine, then runs through Alcock's canal along the inner pelvic wall. It carries sensation (and some control) to the perineum, genitals, and anal sphincter. Pudendal neuralgia is nerve pain in that territory, most often modelled as compression or irritation of the nerve.

Here's the catch: a large share of clinically diagnosed "pudendal neuralgia" is not a true entrapment. It can be non-entrapment nerve pain, an over-tight (hypertonic) pelvic floor, or centrally-sensitized pain that maps onto the same area. That's why this overlaps with levator ani syndrome and chronic proctalgia, and why a co-existing tight pelvic floor is so common.

Dark cinematic rendering of the pudendal nerve pathway through the pelvis

How to Identify It

There is no validated single test with published accuracy for pudendal neuralgia. Diagnosis is clinical, using the Nantes criteria, plus excluding other causes, plus a supportive nerve block.

  • Pain in the pudendal territory (perineum, genitals, anus)
  • Pain worse with sitting, eased by standing or a toilet seat
  • Pain does NOT wake you at night
  • No objective numbness on examination
  • Positive (short-term) response to a pudendal nerve block

Supporting tests are weak: Nantes criteria Sn/Sp: not established · EMG / SSEP limited value · MR neurography emerging, not validated.

Dark cinematic rendering of clinical pelvic assessment anatomy

The Debate

Is it always an entrapment to decompress?

Surgical tradition (Robert RCT, 2005): confirm the block, decompress the refractory ones.

Recent evidence (SR 2020; cohort 2025): a large fraction of "pudendal neuralgia" is atypical / non-entrapment nerve or myofascial pain that won't respond to decompression.

Follow conservative-first stepped care; reserve surgery for a criteria-positive, block-positive, genuinely refractory entrapment. Don't treat the label as if it always means a compressible nerve.

Does adding steroid to the block help it last?

Common practice: add corticosteroid for a longer effect.

Blinded RCT (N=201, 2017): adding corticosteroid gave no durable benefit over local anaesthetic alone.

Use the block to confirm the diagnosis and buy a short window, not for steroid-driven lasting relief.

Honest Limitations

The decompression-surgery result is from a tiny, hand-picked group

The trial that showed surgery beating non-surgical care at 12 months randomized only 32 patients, all pre-selected as confirmed entrapment. The benefit is entirely dependent on a correct diagnosis. It does not generalize to every "pudendal neuralgia" patient.

The physical-therapy trial was small and men-only

The one RCT in the physio lane (TENS added to an exercise program) was single-centre, 52 men, 12 weeks of supervised sessions. It supports TENS as a low-risk adjunct, not as a proven stand-alone fix, and home adherence is unproven.

Interventional results are short and uncertain

Pulsed radiofrequency gives roughly 3 months of relief in mostly small or retrospective studies, and the 2025 meta-analysis concluded the best approach is "unknown." Frame these as repeatable, time-limited relief, not a cure.

The Nuance

Surgery vs conservative is not a fair fight stated bluntly: most patients are managed conservatively first, and decompression has the only positive randomized signal — but only in a narrow, correctly-selected entrapment subgroup, and with real complication rates. A wrong diagnosis is the most common reason a "treatment failure" happens. So the order matters: confirm the pattern, exclude the mimics, treat conservatively, and only escalate toward injections and surgery when a real entrapment is confirmed and refractory.

Mimics to keep in mind: levator ani syndrome and coccydynia (other "worse sitting" pelvic pains), interstitial cystitis, piriformis / deep-gluteal syndrome, endometriosis, and post-surgical or post-childbirth nerve irritation.

Dark cinematic rendering of pelvic differential anatomy

Sources

Educational self-management guidance, not personalized medical treatment. Pelvic and perineal pain has serious possible causes — if any red flag applies, seek medical assessment.

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