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Pelvic floor exercises

(40 Posts)
Cossy Thu 02-May-24 12:03:59

Bump

LucyAnna Thu 02-May-24 11:57:51

Bump

Whiff Thu 02-May-24 11:52:12

Just bumping this up

Bridie22 Thu 02-May-24 07:24:02

Sounds strenuous! Bump

LucyAnna Thu 02-May-24 07:20:00

Bump

Sallywally1 Thu 02-May-24 07:02:22

Thanks. My GP confirmed weak pelvic floor. I was reading about professor malone-now sadly now RIP. who devoted his life research on cystitis. Too complicated to explain on here, but worth reading his conclusions. He said the conventional UTI bugs don’t show on the usual hospital lab tests and in his words are ‘not fit for purpose’ and that results come back as showing no infection despite women being in intense pain. He recommended low dose long term antibiotics (which did not cause resistance to the medication). Thanks for all your replies. I do take mannose btw not sure if it helps or not. The symptoms are intermittent. Today I feel ok, last week I was in agony.

eddiecat78 Tue 30-Apr-24 15:36:31

You really need to be properly assessed before starting exercises. Pain is usually because the pelvic floor muscles are too tense and exercising to make them tighter will make the pain worse

Farmor15 Tue 30-Apr-24 15:09:40

I got one to try to deal with stress incontinence, but I'm not sure how much it helped, as every time I seemed to improve a bit, I would get a cold with a persistent cough and I would be back to square one! I had gone to physio, who had lend me a gadget and recommended. However, reading the information booklet, I'm not sure that this type would help OP, as sometimes apparently it can irritable bladder, which is different from stress incontinence, worse.

Theexwife Tue 30-Apr-24 12:15:01

I bought one, I do not have any problems yet but use intermittently to hopefully stop future weakness.

Many good reviews and was not uncomfortable to use. I researched quite a bit before buying and this was recommended by health professionals as being more use than exercising without.

Sparklefizz Tue 30-Apr-24 12:01:38

Have you tried taking D-Mannose SallyWally ?

MissAdventure Tue 30-Apr-24 11:10:56

Are you drinking plenty, SallyWally?

It sounds daft, but it's actually better to have a bladder full of almost dilute urine than it is to have just a small amount of strong urine, which then often doesnt get fully voided, and irritates the bladder further.

Nannarose Tue 30-Apr-24 10:59:18

So sorry you are going through this, but I really don't know. This is my advice:
1. Simple pelvic floor exercises will only help, but may not by themselves solve your problem
2. Only use probes under supervision (this doesn't apply to everyone, but I think you need to be careful)
3. Talk to whichever professional you are seeing about the effect this is having, and ask them these questions.
4. Get a referral to a specialist physio - they usually describe themselves as 'women's health' . Availability varies - in our area we can self-refer on the NHS, in others you have to ask the GP. If you can afford it, you may consider a private consultation - see above for proper link.
Physios can advise not only on doing the pelvic floor exercises, but can make an assessment and suggestions.

Good luck

Sallywally1 Tue 30-Apr-24 07:58:07

Constipation is an intermittent problem but the urinary issue is beginning to affect my life. The area becomes very painful when the ladder is spilling up (tmi!). I am at my wits end hence the question. Apparently it is incurable. Do I have twenty or so years of pain?

Nannarose Tue 30-Apr-24 07:24:55

Well, it depends on what is causing your irritable bladder. However, pelvic floor exercises are always a good idea, and we should all be doing them regularly. They will help to a certain extent.

Probes (or cones / kegel balls) give useful feedback, but if you can manage without them, given your irritable bladder, I would try.
Have you done them before, and do you know how they should feel? If so, just start! 2 fingers in your vagina will give you some feedback.
You could also consider a specialist physio - you can find one at www.csp.org.uk/public-patient/find-physiotherapist/physio2u.
For myself, I work better with a person rather than using a probe, but that is very individual.

Also, I assume that this has been checked, but are you bowels working regularly? Constipation can cause an 'irritable bladder'.

Sallywally1 Mon 29-Apr-24 22:05:59

Has anyone ever used those pelvic floor internal probes for this problem. And does anyone know if they help irritable bladder? My life has become miserable because of bladder soreness and urgency also called over active bladder.