# Case Report: Neuropsychiatric improvement after treatment of pelvic venous disorder in a multisyndromic patient

**Authors:** Steven J. Smith, Michael J. Sichlau, Peter C. Rowe, Dacre R. T. Knight, Brenda Chen, B. Holly Smith, Isabel C. Sichlau

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2025.1574432 · Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

A patient with multiple chronic conditions improved after treatment for pelvic venous disorder, including better memory and reduced depression.

## Contribution

Demonstrates that treating pelvic venous disorder can improve neuropsychiatric symptoms in a multisyndromic patient.

## Key findings

- Pelvic pain, POTS, interstitial cystitis, and migraines improved after endovascular treatment.
- Neuropsychiatric scores for memory and depression showed significant improvement.
- The patient's disability status was removed following the intervention.

## Abstract

Venous Origin Chronic Pelvic Pain (VO-CPP) causes pelvic pain in women, and is associated with other dysautonomia syndromes such as postural orthostasis and tachycardia syndrome (POTS), chronic fatigue, interstitial cystitis, and fibromyalgia. These conditions have been shown to have associations with Ehlers–Danlos syndrome, migraine headache, irritable bowel syndrome, and brain fog. In this study, a multisyndromic patient was treated for VO-CPP. Pelvic pain, dysautonomia, and neuropsychiatric scores were tracked in this patient.

In a multisyndromic patient with VO-CPP, abnormal venous pooling was treated with endovascular stenting and sclerotherapy. Neuropsychiatric testing was performed before and after intervention.

Along with improvement in scores for pelvic pain, POTS, interstitial cystitis, and migraines, repeat neuropsychiatric testing showed improvement in Memory Functioning Recall and Depression Inventory. The patient’s previous disability status was removed.

The patient's response to endovascular treatment supports a unifying concept of diminished venous return as a contributor to multiple syndromes that may be linked to a single phenotype.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** interstitial cystitis (MONDO:0018301), fibromyalgia (MONDO:0005546), Ehlers–Danlos syndrome (MONDO:0020066), migraine headache (MONDO:0005277), irritable bowel syndrome (MONDO:0005052), Depression (MONDO:0002050)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** interstitial cystitis (MESH:D018856), dysautonomia (MESH:D054969), fibromyalgia (MESH:D005356), migraine headache (MESH:D008881), Neuropsychiatric (MESH:C000631768), Pelvic Pain (MESH:D017699), irritable bowel syndrome (MESH:D043183), pooling (MESH:D010981), VO-CPP (MESH:D011472), Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (MESH:D004535), POTS (MESH:D054972), pelvic venous disorder (MESH:D034161), brain fog (MESH:D005222), Depression (MESH:D003866), chronic fatigue (MESH:D015673)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833758/full.md

## References

26 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833758/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833758