Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even if you feel fine and bounce back. My youngest is 10 years old and I'm in PT for a prolapse and need a device to help me use the bathroom correctly. Still don't pee myself when I sneeze or jump, but my pelvic floor is still weak.
Learn from my mistakes and treat your pelvic floor as a key part of your postpartum recovery, and then beyond!
** Steps off soapbox. ***
If it makes you feel better, the mode of delivery (vaginal) caused this, not a lack of rehab. Pfpt goes to managing symptoms, not to actually healing the prolapse (although it can teach you good pressure management to minimize risk of the prolapse worsening in menopause). But as another poster said on here, planned c sections are the only proven way to minimize peolapse risk (and a route I would have taken had any OBs actually warned me that prolapse occurs after essentially all (9/10) vaginal deliveries).
Anonymous wrote:Just offering another POV - I saw a pelvic floor PT proactively during my last pregnancy, which was helpful but nothing I couldn’t have watched a few YouTube videos about. I went again after birth (C section) and it was a waste of time - there were no issues to rehab. I stayed active (walking / running / yoga / barre) throughout pregnancy and PP, focused on core / pelvic floor strength, didn’t gain too much weight and lost it all quickly. Had zero issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[img]Anonymous wrote:I had C sections so I missed the pelvic floor issues.
That’s not how it works.
Of course it is. Vaginal birth is a significant risk factor for pelvic floor dysfunction.
Anonymous wrote:Even if you feel fine and bounce back. My youngest is 10 years old and I'm in PT for a prolapse and need a device to help me use the bathroom correctly. Still don't pee myself when I sneeze or jump, but my pelvic floor is still weak.
Learn from my mistakes and treat your pelvic floor as a key part of your postpartum recovery, and then beyond!
** Steps off soapbox. ***
Anonymous wrote:Just offering another POV - I saw a pelvic floor PT proactively during my last pregnancy, which was helpful but nothing I couldn’t have watched a few YouTube videos about. I went again after birth (C section) and it was a waste of time - there were no issues to rehab. I stayed active (walking / running / yoga / barre) throughout pregnancy and PP, focused on core / pelvic floor strength, didn’t gain too much weight and lost it all quickly. Had zero issues.
Anonymous wrote:How old are you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[img]Anonymous wrote:I had C sections so I missed the pelvic floor issues.
That’s not how it works.
Of course it is. Vaginal birth is a significant risk factor for pelvic floor dysfunction.
Anonymous wrote:[img]Anonymous wrote:I had C sections so I missed the pelvic floor issues.
That’s not how it works.
Anonymous wrote:I had C sections so I missed the pelvic floor issues.