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| Introduction |
-
Applied Anatomy
- The coccxy is a small triangular bone made up of
3 - 5 fused rudimentary vertebrae.
- Rear View

- Front View

- Side View

- It is joined to the lower part of the sacral bone
by the synovial sacro-coccygeal joint.
- It is supported by ligaments to the front
(anterior saccrococcygeal), side (lateral
sacro-coccygeal) and back (posterior
sacro-coccygeal).
- It has a nerve supply from the sacral plexus and
the coccygeal nerve.
- The pelvic floor muscles attach to it's tip

- Movements
- It flexes forward during contraction of the
pelvic floor muscles e.g. during sex
- It extends backwards during labour and
defaecation.
- It can also bend to each side and rotate a
little on it's long axis.
- In many normal people the coccyx is angled
forwards making it difficult to feel.
-
Causes of pain
-
Trauma
- Direct blow to the coccyx - can be
fractured.
- Inflammation of the sacro-coccygeal
joint.
- Sacro-coccygeal ligament sprain.
-
Referred pain from other
sources (common)
- Lumbar spine facet joints
and muscles 
- Pelvic Floor Muscles

- Sacrospinous / Sacrotuberous Ligaments

- Buttock Muscles (Gluteus Maximus)

-
Tumours
- Secondary spread to the sacrum and coccyx
bones.
- Referred pain from lower rectal and anal
tumours. If there is a history of altered bowel function or
rectal bleeding,
then this cause should be excluded before
proceeding to any other treatments.

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| Treatment |
- Coccygeal pain (coccydynia) is notoriously difficult to
treat. Like any other painful condition, treatment should
be directed to the source of the pain. However, the
source can only be found after a thorough examination
while considering all the possible local and referred
causes. Focussing on where the patient says its painful
will only result in failure. In this condition one has to
literally think laterally.
-
Sacro-coccygeal Joint
Injection
- Injection of a small amounts of local anaesthetic
and steroid into this joint can help when it is
inflamed after an injury (e.g. fall onto the
bottom).
- To make this treatment less painful a small
volume caudal epidural injection can be
done first helping to numb the area.
- The joint injection can also be combined with
manipulation of the coccyx per rectum (see
below).
- In the very nervous the whole thing can be
performed under intravenous sedation
.
-
Manipulation of the coccyx per
rectum
- After an injury the coccyx can get stuck in one
position. This can be due to stiffness of the
sacro-coccygeal joint and spasm of the surrounding
pelvic muscles. In women this can make sexual
intercourse very painful, as using the pelvic floor
muscles causes the coccyx to flex forwards.
- The coccyx can be held using a pincer grip
between the doctor's index finger (placed in the
patient's rectum) and the doctor's thumb on the
outside. The coccyx can then be gently manipulated
into flexion / extension, side bending and rotation.
Moving the coccyx backwards into extension also
stretches the pelvic floor muscles when they are in
spasm.
- Sometimes a small click is heard when the coccyx
is manipulated. This emanates from the
sacro-coccygeal joint as it releases.
- Manipulation of the coccyx can be combined with a
caudal epidural injection, scaro-coccygeal joint
injection and intravenous sedation
.
-
Trigger Point Injections
- Trigger point injections to
Gluteus Maximus and the Pelvic Floor Muscles (see
pictures above) can be useful when these are the
cause of referred pain to the coccyx. Botox
injections may also be helpful in the longer
term. Exercises for these specific
muscles should be encouraged.
-
Prolotherapy
- When the cause of the coccyx pain is due to a
sprain of the scarotuberous or sacrospinous
ligaments, Prolotherapy may help repair the
sprain. A diagnostic local anaesthetic / steroid
injection should help to confirm the diagnosis before
proceeding.
-
Spinal Manipulation
-
Facet Joint Injections
-
Surgery
- Removing the coccyx will fail to help if the
coccyx is not the cause of the pain.
- It is important that all the other causes of
referred pain to the coccyx are explored / treated
before resorting to surgical excision.

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