Login
Register

Home

About Us

Diagnoses

Treatments

Classes

Resources

Media

Testimonials

Blog

Account

Blog
Register
Why you should be doing Kegels

Wondering why you should be doing Kegels?

In my early days of being a pelvic floor PT, I was convinced I had the answer to all the woes of the pelvic floor. One word – Kegels. As I’ve developed professionally, I certainly realized Kegels have their place.

However, they do not have their place with all things related to the pelvic floor. There are specific instances when Kegels (also known as PC or pelvic floor muscle contractions) are the answer. I’m a firm believer in doing a Kegel program combined with a core strengthening program that will address the bigger picture. Here’s why you should be doing Kegels if you meet certain criteria:

  1. Most women that experience urinary incontinence

    1. A thorough physical exam can identify if postural dysfunction and weakness in your pelvic floor and what I call “pelvic floor accessory muscles” that are contributing to your incontinence.
    2. There are 3 primary types of urinary incontinence that physical therapy can treat:
      1. Stress Urinary Incontinence (SUI)
        1. Involuntary urine leakage with coughing, laughing, sneezing, exercise
      2. Urge Urinary Incontinence (UUI)
        1. Involuntary urine leakage associated with strong urge sensation and the inability to maintain continence on the way to the bathroom.
        2. Also associated with constant leakage (i.e. with walking, not necessarily associated with an urgency sensation)
      3. Mixed Urinary Incontinence (MUI)
        1. Having both stress urinary incontinence and urge urinary incontinence
    3. Stress Urinary Incontinence most often is accompanied with significant muscle weakness in the pelvic floor muscles, and often in the pelvic floor accessory muscles (such as the gluteal or adductor muscles). There may be poor posture associated as well that is inhibiting (preventing) proper pelvic floor muscle function.
    4. Urge Urinary Incontinence may or may not be associated with weakness in the pelvic floor muscles. These muscles need to be evaluated for trigger points and high tone that may be inhibiting normal muscle function.
    5. In Mixed urinary incontinence, both realms need to be evaluated and a treatment plan appropriate to the findings developed
  2. Women with pelvic organ prolapse

    1. his is when a pelvic organ (such as your bladder, uterus or rectum), drops (prolapses) from it’s normal place and pushes against the walls of your vagina, which can happen when your muscles get weak or stretched from childbirth or surgery (WebMD). This can also occur with constant or repetitive straining, such as what occurs with chronic constipation.
    2. It is often associated with discomfort and has a wide variety of presentations from from pain with sitting, dyspareunia (deep pain with intercourse), difficulty with voiding or bowel movements, pain with standing/walking/running or a report of a “pelvic pressure”.
    3. Depending on the level or grade of the prolapse, appropriate pelvic floor muscle strengthening alongside a pelvic floor muscle facilatory program can lend itself to significant improvements in the discomfort or pain associated with the prolapse. In part, because these muscles are acting to support the falling organs. However, sometimes ligament tearing is so significant or the prolapse so severe that surgery may be required to further reduce these symptoms.
  3. Women with diminished orgasm intensity

    1. Yes, stronger Kegels=better intensity orgasm, generally speaking. Yippee!!

Basically, if weakness contributing to a lack of support or a reduced ability to close around your openings to maintain continence is to blame, you should learn how to do your Kegels correctly NOW and begin a program that specifically addresses your contributing factors to weakness.

A trained pelvic floor physical therapist is the best person to evaluate all potential contributing musculoskeletal factors. At our offices, licensed physical therapists will go over a complete history or your condition. Once we have your background, a physical exam will begin that will address your posture and look at your muscle strength and flexibility of all the muscles that primarily influence your pelvic floor. Lastly, a pelvic floor muscle examination will determine your pelvic floor muscle strength and endurance, two important components of muscle function. We will also look at muscle coordination address any abnormal findings.

Classic stress urinary incontinence will typically take 6-8 visits to achieve 90-100% resolution of symptoms. These visits are often spread out over 3-6 months and is discussed on an individual basis. Urge incontinence has more variation, and can take as few as 4 visits up to 12 visits, again spread out over time. In all instances, we are able to spread out visits as a home exercise program is developed to address your specific areas of weakness and dysfunction.

However, just because you have incontinence, does not 100% guarantee that Kegels are the answer. In my upcoming article “Why You Should STOP Doing Kegels NOW”, I’ll go over why this magical muscle contraction is not all it’s cracked up to be.

What Our Patients Have to Say

Prev
Next

Testimonial by Fritzette H.

I went to Heather after the birth of my third child. It was lucky, really, that I was referred to her, because my doctor had referred me to a surgeon for a possible hysterectomy or pelvic wall rebuild. Thankfully, I went to Heather before undergoing either surgery, she was able to fix the problem. She has studied extensively in women's health--even written a book about it--and was able to diagnose my problem, suggest a course of treatment (6 weeks), and then follow through with said treatment. By the end, as she said, I was as good as gold. Boy, was it worth it! Though uncomfortable to talk about, much less write about, it is worth getting the word out there. If you have painful intercourse, especially after birth or other trauma, the treatment may be as simple as Physical Therapy (with Heather, of course). I highly recommend her.

-- Fritzette H., 3/24/16 via Yelp!

Testimonial by T.H.

I started seeing Heather in October 2014. For more than two years, I had been suffering from painful urinary tract infection type symptoms after my bartholins gland surgery which included constant burning and urinary frequency sensation that led to more and more painful intercourse. I had made multiple visits to internist, obgyn and urologist's offices, went through a range of treatment with UTI and bladder frequency medication that included antibiotics, vesicare, estrogen cream, but nothing worked.

Read more: Testimonial by T.H.

Testimonial by J.B.

My husband and I were having problems with painful intercourse. My therapist recommended that I go and get a pelvic floor evaluation from a physical therapist. Having never been treated by a physical therapist, I wondered how this really was going to help me. My husband who is a physician was very supportive and agreed that a PT evaluation would be a great idea. So i made the appointment and was blown away by what I learned. I had no idea that pelvic floor muscles could get tight and have trigger points just like any other muscle in the body. I'm a massage therapist and very familiar with tight muscles, and this new thought really amazed me. Heather's program to help relax and strengthen these muscles made such a difference. I can say that I am 100% pain free during intercourse now. Yippee! Going to the PT appointments and doing the at-home exercises was definitely a discipline, but it's 100% worth it! The rewards are amazing.

-- J.B.

Testimonial by R.H.

No one could tell me why I was having pain during sex--sharp pain, not just uncomfortable, pain. I was referred to Heather Jeffcoat after researching several different options. I had seen a specialist who told me physical therapy would not help and my only option was surgery. I really didn't want to go that route, so when we got a referral, I decided to try it--it can't hurt, I thought. I am so glad I did. She diagnosed the problem right away, which was a relief in itself.

To know why I was having pain eased my mind immensely. And to hear that she could fix it without surgery was another relief. She said she could fix the problem in 6 weeks. I think it was actually 4 for me. She was very methodical, and treated me as an intelligent human being capable of participating in my own recovery. I would absolutely recommend her to anyone. She did not try to prolong my session numbers, she worked hard to accommodate my schedule (and the fact that I had to bring a baby to sessions), and she was completely honest the entire time. It is so hard to find someone with these characteristics, much less a professional who is so good at what she does. She has my highest respect.

-- R.H.

Testimonial by Carolina J.

I had tried Pelvic Floor Physical Therapy before (with another PT) and I had a really bad (painful) experience. A friend of mine and fellow patient, told me about Heather, Laureen and Femina PT (née Fusion Wellness & Physical Therapy) and I decided to try again. I am so happy I did! Femina PT have, literally, changed my life. I was able to do again things I couldn't do for over 10 years!! Their bedside manners are impeccable, their knowledge and understanding make me feel comfortable to recommend this place to anyone in pain. Specially if you have Endometriosis. 100% recommended!!

-- Carolina J., 12/28/16 via Yelp!

Testimonial by S.S., age 54

Heather is the best! I saw her today for terrible hip/groin pain. I was so impressed with the safety measures in place and felt completely safe . Thanks for the healing hands.

S.S., age 54

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Get access to our free downloads and a 15% discount on Heather's book "Sex Without Pain"!
captcha 
I agree with the Terms and Conditions and the Privacy policy