If you had an MRI done for your tailbone pain (coccyx pain, coccydynia) you should try to get a copy of the computer CD containing your MRI images.
Ideally you should review the actual images with your treating physician (typically the physician who ordered the MRI). It’s a very bad sign about your treating/ordering physician […]
A “bone scan” is a test performed by the nuclear medicine part of a radiology center.
A “Nuclear Medicine Bone Scan” is generally considered to be very good for detecting bone destruction from things like bone cancer (malignancy), bone infection (osteomyelitis), or bone injuries (such as fractures).
If the bone scan is truly being done […]
In the news…
Ryan Villopoto recently retired from his motocross (motorcycle racing) career due to an April 2015 crash in Italy that reportedly caused multiple tailbone fractures (broken bones of the coccyx) and low back injuries of the lumbar spine.
Villopoto is only 26 years old, but was already an accomplished motorcycle racer, including six-time […]
In the news…
A United States military veteran with tailbone pain (also called coccyx pain, or coccydynia) turned out to have cancer and infection (a pus-filled abscess) in the tailbone region.
This shows the importance of proper medical care and thorough medical work-up.
Here is the news article and video: http://wlfi.com/2015/07/15/news-18-special-report-va-investigating-wl-doctor-after-veterans-complaint/
(FYI: he’s not […]
Surgical removal of the tailbone (coccyx) is medically known as coccygectomy.
In the United States the coccygectomy surgery would often be considered an outpatient surgery, meaning that you have the surgery in the morning and go home by that evening. But that may vary depending on how someone is doing in the recovery area after […]
I have treated many women whose tailbone pain began during pregnancy or while giving birth (during labor and delivery).
Some of these women ask me what they should do if they are considering another pregnancy.
I sometimes advise those patients to speak with their obstetricians/gynecologists regarding considering C-section for their next pregnancy. A cesarean section (C-section) delivers the baby […]
One complication of surgical tailbone removal (coccygectomy) is that infection may occur at the surgical site.
Part of the reason for the relatively high likelihood of infection at this surgical site (compared with others) is that the coccygectomy site is so close to the anus.
Superficial infections can happen at the skin, which is called […]
Last week I was a “Visiting Professor” speaking on the topic of “Tailbone Pain (Coccyx Pain): Causes and Treatments” at Carolinas Medical Center, in Charlotte, North Carolina.
-Patrick Foye, M.D.
www.TailboneDoctor.com
Coming soon… my book on Tailbone Pain!
It’s called:
Tailbone Pain Relief Now!
Causes and Treatments for Your Sore or Injured Coccyx
I’ve worked on/off on this book for more than 10 years, and finally this past year I put in hundreds of hours to make it a reality.
I’ve never written an […]
It is a shame when people are left suffering in pain for years without the doctor ever even getting imaging studies to look at the painful area.
For tailbone pain (coccyx pain), it is unfortunately very common that people suffer for years without their doctors getting any imaging test to look at the painful area.
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