Pelvic pain and dysfunction part 3: 7 tips to nip that pain in the butt
In part 1 and part 2, we discussed the symptoms and causes of chronic pain and the basics of an effective treatment and management plan. Let’s discuss what you can do NOW to help improve your situation.
Many structures are in the pelvis, underneath the bladder, bowel and uterus. All these structures can irritate each other if inflamed, enlarged, irritable or tight. Gaining improvement can be as simple as reducing irritability to just 1 of these structures, or it may require addressing all of them.
While effective treatment and management requires a multi-faceted approach, there are a number of lifestyle modifications that can be easily implemented to start reducing triggers, allowing the nerves more mobility and reducing the nervous system tension in order to directly impact the negative cycle and start increasing comfort now.
Tip # 1:
Minimise activities that
tend to trigger and aggravate pudendal and perineal nerve irritation such as:
riding a bicycle (especially for long periods)
horse riding
jumping (for example, on a trampoline)
intense exercise
lifting weights (anything over 5 kg is too much)
anything that causes intense pain (if 0 is no
pain and 10 is the worst pain imaginable, do not go over a pain scale of 7/10).
Tip # 2:
For any activity where
you know pain comes on after a certain period of time (for example sitting for
more than 5 minutes):
Ensure that you set an alarm and only sit for 4
minutes at any one time.
When the alarm goes off – get up!
go to the toilet
or get a drink or stretch before continuing to sit
when
sitting again, ensure the alarm is set for another 4 minutes.
Tip # 3:
Ensure you have good
posture in any activities you perform for a prolonged time (more than a few
minutes). Get ergonomic advice if required.
For sitting:
ensure that your knees sit at the same level or
slightly lower than your hip joints.
allow your pelvis to rotate forward slightly, keeping
a slight extension in your lower back – this happens naturally when your knees
are lower than your hips, helping to keep the natural spinal curves.
This
ensures your back is “straight” with your head sitting directly over your
pelvis.
It
also helps your shoulders to sit in a good position, not rounded forward or
held up high towards your ears.
Make sure that you don’t lean on your elbows or
put too much pressure on your wrists (or you will get elbow or wrist strain injuries)
(it also pushes your shoulders up and tends to make you lean to one side).
ensure that your feet are flat on the floor
(use a floor stool if required for comfort)
ensure the seat is cushioned a little
(especially if you have pudendal nerve pain) – you can use a doughnut ring if
pain is more severe.
Tip # 4:
Lie with your legs up
the wall for 5-10 minutes in the evenings
lie on your back, on the floor with your
shoulders relaxed and rotated backwards
get your bottom as close to the wall as
possible. Adding a cushion underneath your bottom to raise the angle of your pelvis.
place your legs up the wall and relax (you could
use a meditation or relaxation app at the same time)
only stay for 5 minutes initially, but if it
gets painful, stop. Aim to get to 10 minutes per night.
This exercise
allows pain relief in the pelvic area – for
vaginal issues, haemorrhoids, pudendal nerve pain, period pain and also assists
with reducing pressure associated with incontinence issues
increases blood return to heart, therefore
helps with venous return in general and varicose veins/haemorrhoids etc
allows the spine to relax and lengthen after a
day of compression forces from standing and sitting.
Tip # 5:
Avoid straining on the
toilet
To avoid constipation, it’s important to keep
hydrated, eat healthy fruit and vegetable fibre, exercise regularly and use a natural
laxative if necessary (avoid stimulant laxatives).
Don’t sit for extended periods as this
stretches the ligaments and increases the pressure in the wrong spots
increasing likelihood of pain around the buttock (inferior cluneal nerve) or
haemorrhoids. If it’s not coming, stop and go for a little walk and come back
when you feel more ready.
Aim to sit correctly on the toilet (not squat
over it) as this tends to constrict rather than relax the area, increasing
downward pressure and reducing ease of toileting.
Tip # 6:
Perform a relaxation
and strengthening program for the pelvic floor muscles daily.
Start by
massaging the perineum to help relax the pelvic floor muscles, relax the
nervous system and improve circulation in the area
In the
bathroom or a private area, use a small amount of unscented, natural oil
(coconut, olive or jojoba are best)
Locate the
area right in the middle – between your anus and your vagina in women or base
of the penis in men
Use 2
fingers with the oil and gently rub that central area in a clockwise motion for
20 rotations
Then
gently rub in a counter clockwise motion for another 20 rotations.
Use a simplified Kegel-reverse
Kegel pelvic floor exercise to help your pelvic floor re-learn to strengthen
its contraction as well as relax when contraction is not needed (many issues
are due to an over-tense pelvic floor).
Sit or
stand with good posture, feeling your head being pulled up in the centre, your
shoulders relaxed and back a little, your chest “out”, your natural back curves
present and not accentuated and equal pressure either through both sit bones or
through the front and back of both feet.
As you
breathe in, allow your pelvic floor to relax – feeling that centre point
(located in the previous exercise) drop, and breath in for a count of 4-5.
As you
breathe out, allow your pelvic floor to gently contract and pull together –
feeling that centre point gently squeeze together and up towards your pelvic
organs and breathe out holding that squeeze for a count of 6-7.
Tip # 7:
Alter sexual
activities. Some people find that sex is painful or that afterwards, symptoms
seem to worsen.
Always use a gentle lubricant (that works for
you – jojoba oil is great)
Using a relaxation technique may be of benefit
Play around with positions to find what is most
comfortable for you.
If you would like to chat about your situation, drop
us an email, call, or book an appointment with Alexis.
In part 1, we shared some of the causes and symptoms of pelvic dysfunction. In part 2, we discuss chronic pain (as compared to an acute condition) and why chronic pain can be so complicated to deal with effectively. It’s important to understand what’s going on in your body first, so that you can work out the steps you need to take in order to help heal yourself. It also helps you feel more confident in your approach and in the fact that improvement CAN happen, as well as give you motivation to keep going (healing has good and bad days and times when it feels like nothing is changing, then suddenly, but only after consistent action, things improve and you suddenly realise, the pain you “always” had is no longer there).
Pelvic dysfunction is a complicated subject, because:
There are so
many variations of pelvic dysfunctions and symptoms.
There are
multiple possible causes and a large number of associated factors and triggers.
It’s a
taboo subject so most people don’t want to talk about it.
People
don’t generally ask their GP or health practitioner for help for the above
reason and don’t realise that there is anything that can be done to help.
People
don’t talk to their physical/manual therapists (such as their Osteopath,
Chiropractor or Physiotherapist) as they don’t expect that lifestyle factors
and muscle imbalances can be an easily treated part of the solution.
Because of these above
issues, it often becomes a chronic pain condition. But what exactly is a chronic
pain condition?
The definition of chronic
pain is any pain that extends beyond the expected healing time for an injury.
Generally, it’s accepted that most tissues have healed by 12 weeks. So, any
pain that has continued for longer than 3 months is chronic pain. Conversely,
acute pain is any pain condition that has resulted from a direct injury and is
still within its expected tissue healing time (thus any pain less than 3 months
old).
The brain is a pain
modulating unit. That means that any pain stimulus, via nerves, alerts the
brain to a potential issue and the brain then uses all the information it can
gather before deciding if there is a problem or a potential problem and how
dangerous it is. The intensity of the pain we feel is based on the brain’s
interpretation of the level of injury or danger at hand. The information the
brain uses to decide is vast and includes things like past experience, imminent
danger in our surroundings (such as a car coming straight for you) and our fear
levels.
Because of this, the
brain is able to turn up or down the volume of pain you feel based on its need
to keep you safe. Generally, the more threat there is to further harm, the
louder the pain signals one feels. Yet, because the brain’s job is to keep us
safe, it can turn down the level of pain to allow necessary action, hence the
“apparent paradox” in stories you may have heard when for example a person has
badly broken their leg, yet managed to walk many kilometres to get to help or
run from an explosion etc.
However, when pain
continues for extended periods, the wiring in the brain for that location
begins to change. Just as a dirt path used over and over again gets deeper, so
does the neural pathway. This means that the brain becomes hyper aware of that
area of the body and is over sensitive to any nerve input that comes from that
location, alerting us to potential injury, via pain, even if there is no risk.
Can you remember a
time when you got a cut on your finger and it became inflamed? That area may
have begun to feel painful even at the slightest touch such as the gentle
swiping of fabric across it? In fact, even the adjacent finger sometimes feels
painful, for no apparent reason. This is an example of sensitisation.
This is further
intensified by our interpretation of the situation, such as how bad the injury
is, our belief that any movement that causes pain is in fact worsening the
injury and slowing or preventing healing, the level to which our injury has
been affecting our daily life and functioning, and our fear that this situation
will never end and might only get worse.
As you can see, the
brain collects information from many places and can be influenced by many
factors including our individual interpretation of what is happening to us.
Thus, we feel increased pain when
our general levels of stress are high
we avoid all activities that hurt (including
ones that help heal) because we believe they are damaging us
we fear having pain in general – because
it’s not
nice
we believe
that there is something wrong and we are making it worse
we don’t
understand the biology of our situation
we fear
that we’ll never improve and we catastrophise the worst about what that might
mean for our future
we’re
afraid that there is something seriously wrong with us.
These factors make
treating chronic pain more difficult because in fact the tissues, while they
may not be functioning correctly are not “damaged” anymore, so one cannot just
deal with the “damaged” tissues nor just the musculoskeletal imbalances that
are perpetuating the functional symptoms (such as reduced strength or
movement).
Indeed effective
management and treatment must therefore deal with as many of the above-mentioned
types of psychological aspects as well as the physical factors. This requires
education (about pain and the specific process happening in one’s own body),
lifestyle modification, minimising triggers, reducing stress, increasing neural
relaxation, education and techniques for learning to deal with always having
pain (in some cases), rehabilitation exercises and more. Further, all of these
components are unique to the individual, so body awareness, support and
guidance, and some trial and error are required to build the correct plan of
action. Given this complicated and individual nature of chronic pain, I hope
the importance of a multi-factorial approach, starting with education and body
awareness, is clear.
Once we understand the
injury we have, the biology of pain and what is happening inside us, and which
activities, if any, to avoid, our fear is reduced. We can also be confident in
a stretching and strengthening program and doing activities that cause pain as
we understand the difference between hurt and harm. This gives us control,
piece of mind and discipline to continue the healing activities required to
balance the tissues in the area and re-wire the brain to reduce its pain alert
system. Further, we can understand the reason behind any lifestyle, habitual
activity and postural modifications as well as stress reduction techniques
required, making compliance easier.
Ok, so it’s
complicated, where do I go for help?
A practitioner who has some specific knowledge
about pelvic pain and dysfunction is important (potentially an Osteopath,
Chiropractor, Physiotherapist or even Acupuncturist – but you need to ask). A
good practitioner can:
help you deal with the musculoskeletal
imbalances and give you exercises
discuss and explain chronic pain with you and
how you can use techniques and exercises to help re-wire your brain
assist with neuro-feedback, to ensure that you
are using your pelvic floor correctly and give you both pelvic floor
strengthening AND relaxation exercises
give advice on correct toileting techniques and
support and training for lifestyle interventions to treat different types of
incontinence issues (urge and stress)
assist with medicated creams, medications and
referral to surgical (laser etc) interventions IF and only if necessary (generally
a GP or gynaecologist – but you need to ask specifically, and I would recommend
seeing a specialist gynaecologist for this type of thing as with a practitioner
at Sydney’s WHRIA clinic who are researchers and leaders in this field and have
minimal invasive and best results-based interventions).
If you would like to chat about your situation, drop
us an email, call, or book an appointment with Alexis.
Stay tuned for part 3
where we share 7 simple tips to improve your situation NOW.
Pelvic pain and dysfunction part 1: Shhh we can’t talk about that!
Do you suffer from:
incontinence (urinary or bowel)
urinary frequency; urgency
bowel or bladder irritation (with
or without pain; can feel like a full sensation)
pain (electric shock like,
shooting, aching, itching or a raw feeling) of your clitoris, vagina, labia (or
penis, scrotum), urethra or perineum (space between your vagina [or scrotum]
and your anus)
Pain around your sit bone(s) when
you sit (especially for long periods)
Pain during sex (or afterwards)
Pain in your buttocks that may
often or sometimes travel down your leg and foot (can be one sided or affect
both legs).
Did you know that help is available?
In this three-part series, you’ll
learn about the key symptoms and causes of pelvic dysfunction, pain and
incontinence. We’ll touch on chronic pain and discuss the basis of an effective
management and treatment program. We’ll also reveal 7 simple actions to help
you take control of your health and improve your individual symptoms of pelvic
pain and dysfunction.
This is a difficult and sensitive
subject and often not discussed due to its private nature.
It’s important to realise that in
many cases there is a lot that can be done to help – there is no need to suffer
in silence!
Symptoms can be wide-ranging, and
diagnosis can’t be confirmed with just one test. Instead it requires a look
into your personal symptoms and a physical assessment of your pelvic structures
to identify imbalances of the joints, ligaments and muscles (tightness,
weakness etc) and locations where nerves can become irritated and “trapped”.
Symptoms:
Can include (but are not limited
to)
pain in the buttocks around where you sit
(sometimes in the legs and feet too)
sharp, electric type shooting pain around or even
within the vagina in women and scrotum (or even shaft of the penis) in men
pain during (or after) sex
bladder or bowel
irritation/discomfort/incontinence/frequency/urgency
Pain that can refer or radiate to include part
of, or even the length of the leg (generally down the outside) and even go
down into the bottom of the foot.
Causes:
There is no one cause, and
generally multiple factors are involved
Pudendal nerve entrapment –
including from
long periods of cycling
excessive physical exercise
straining (from heavy lifting or
straining on the toilet)
stress
posture
previous pelvic or perineal
trauma/injury
Musculoskeletal imbalances –
including from
long periods of cycling
excessive physical exercise
straining (from heavy lifting or
straining on the toilet)
stress
posture
previous pelvic or perineal
trauma/injury
Neuropathic (nerve related) pain
Trauma – including from
difficult childbirth
gynaecological and/or colorectal surgery or issues (eg internal
abdominal adhesions or uterine fibroids and the like)
Infection (including skin
conditions).
If you’re suffering
from any of the above issues, or some sort of dysfunction of the pelvic/lower
abdominal area or genital region, it’s likely that an in-depth history and
physical assessment plus a multi-pronged treatment approach can be of great
assistance. So, talk to a primary health practitioner (pelvic physiotherapist,
GP or Osteopath for example) and find out more. If the advice you receive does
not seem logical or if you don’t receive the options that help you gain back
control, we suggest you try another practitioner, until you get the support you
need.
And remember, working
with a combination of such practitioners to get an integrated and diverse
treatment and home care plan is your best chance of success.
If you would like to
chat about your situation, drop us an email, call, or book an appointment with
Alexis.
Stay tuned for part
2, where we discuss chronic pain and its complicated nature as well as the
basic idea behind effective treatment and management of pelvic pain and
dysfunction.