ABSTRACT

Pudendal neuralgia is a little known and consequently poorly understood clinical entity. The absence of objective signs (imaging, clinical examination) means that the diagnosis is based exclusively on the patient’s description, hence the importance of a meticulous clinical interview that determines all of the subsequent clinical examination, complementary investigations, and therapeutic proposals (1). The functional disability generated by this pain is often severe, with considerable social, family, and sexual repercussions (2,3).