In January 2017 a condition that I hypothesised to be coccydynia spontaneously occurred.
**The key symptom is that if I sit on a hard surface such as the floor putting direct pressure on the coccyx area, it is very painful.**
Also, sitting in a firm chair in such a way as to put direct pressure on the coccyx area also makes it sore, though the more padding in the chair makes it sore more slowly and less sore. Sitting leaning forward, putting my weight on upper hamstrings, is always fine. Laying on a hard surface such as the floor on my back or side is not a problem either, as there is only acute pain when I sit on the floor at like a 45 degree angle which puts the pressure directly onto the tailbone.
In February 2017 I went to see my regular physiotherapist who is a back specialist. He began a treatment program of pressing on the left and then right sides of the coccyx. His pressing hard with his thumb into the side of tailbone was excruciatingly painful at the moment, but not lasting pain—I felt fine when he was done. The degree of soreness on the right side went down, and he concluded after say 6 sessions in total that there was nothing else he could do for me. He was amazed that the condition hadn’t arisen from a fall on my coccyx, but he did say to me it seemed like coccydynia. I emphasise that it was idiopathic origin, and not caused by acute trauma such as a fall.
However, eleven months later, the coccyx has not recovered fully, and still gets sore in those situations. Though some would say it is only a mild condition at this time, and does not interrupt my functioning, except I am careful to avoid sitting in a way that puts pressure on the coccyx, I am getting tired of this chronic problem and sought a fresh perspective on diagnosis and treatment.
Last week I visited another physiotherapist. His evaluation is that actually the coccyx is well-seated and is fine. His diagnosis, based on pressing on my left and right SI Joints, is that the left SI Joint is springy and normal, but the right SI Joint is rigid (and tender to me). Therefore he concluded that my butt pain problem originates from right SI Joint pressure on the ano-coccygeal nerve He also thought there was likely to be neural sensitivity or neural over-reaction after all these months of tenderness in that area. He started me on a program of SI Joint mobilisation exercises: Bridge-up (glute bridge) from laying on my back, and also prone Single Knee to Chest. However, still no relief yet.
Yet, I already do pelvic mobilisation exercises such as rocking, squats, hip hinging, bird dog, and ASLR (active straight leg raise)—if I can do all that, with no soreness, why don’t I have a healthy pelvis?
Any advice on diagnosis and treatment? Also, I’m not even sure who to see for advice? The problem doesn’t seem serious enough to see a medical doctor. I can’t find a physiotherapist listing coccydynia as a special interest, nor can I find a pelvic specialist physiotherapist in my area.
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