Ganglion impar: Difference between revisions

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'''Editor-In-Chief:''' Patrick Foye, MD, Associate Professor, Physical Medicine and Rehab., UMDNJ-NJMS [mailto:FoyePM@umdnj.edu]
'''Editor-In-Chief:''' [[User:Patrick Foye, M.D.|Patrick Foye, MD, Associate Professor, Physical Medicine and Rehab., UMDNJ-NJMS]] [mailto:FoyePM@umdnj.edu]


==Overview==
==Overview==

Revision as of 13:49, 22 January 2009

Template:Infobox Anatomy Editor-In-Chief: Patrick Foye, MD, Associate Professor, Physical Medicine and Rehab., UMDNJ-NJMS [1]

Overview

The pelvic portion of each sympathetic trunk is situated in front of the sacrum, medial to the anterior sacral foramina. It consists of four or five small sacral ganglia, connected together by interganglionic cords, and continuous above with the abdominal portion. Below, the two pelvic sympathetic trunks converge, and end on the front of the coccyx in a small ganglion, the ganglion impar (or ganglion of Walther).

Clinical significance

Physicians at New Jersey Medical School specializing in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation have published that sometimes even just a single local nerve block injection at the ganglion impar can give 100% relief of coccydynia (tailbone pain, also called coccyx pain), when performed under fluoroscopic guidance.[1]

See also

References

  1. Foye P, Buttaci C, Stitik T, Yonclas P (2006). "Successful injection for coccyx pain". Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 85 (9): 783–4. PMID 16924191.

External links

Template:Neuroscience-stub Template:Gray's Template:Autonomic Template:WikiDoc Sources