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Cristina Signes

Cristina Signes

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Dr. Cristina Signes Pon is a specialist in Obstetrics and Gynecology Colegiado Number : 464623236 Clinical interests: General Gynaecology, Pelvic Floor Dysfunction, Urinary and Gynaecological Related Bowel Dysfunction, Pelvic Floor related Sexual Dysfunction, Urogynaecology, Specialist in Obstetrics and Gynecology. Dr. Cristina Signes Pons is a highly respected gynecologist with over a decade of experience, specializing in Obstetrics and Gynecology. After earning her medical degree from the prestigious University of Valencia in 2012, she completed her specialized residency training at the University and Polytechnic Hospital La Fe de Valencia in 2017. Dr. Signes is an active member of the Ilustre Colegio Oficial de Médicos de Valencia, with license number 464623236. With clinics in both Moraira and Javea and ongoing work at Denia Hospital, Dr. Signes has become a trusted name in women's healthcare throughout the region. Known for her compassionate approach, she offers personalized sexual health screenings and expert care in Gynecology, ensuring each patient feels comfortable and supported. She is also specially trained in delivering the cutting-edge NU-V treatment, offering innovative solutions tailored to individual needs. Whether it’s general gynecological care, maternity services, or specialized treatments, Dr. Cristina Signes Pons is dedicated to helping her patients make informed and empowered health decisions.

MD OB-GYN
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womens health clinic faq

sometimes contributory usually not the only cause look at hormones properly

Women’s Health Clinic FAQ

Can poor diet cause hormonal imbalance and vaginal dryness?

This question often reflects a reasonable instinct: if the body is undernourished or habits are poor, could intimate symptoms suffer too? The answer is that general health can certainly influence how well you feel, but dryness should not automatically be blamed on diet without looking at the usual direct causes first.

Direct answer

A poor diet can contribute to feeling run down and may sit inside a broader pattern of hormonal and menopausal symptoms, but it is not usually the main direct cause of vaginal dryness on its own. Persistent dryness is more often driven by low oestrogen, irritation, medicines, arousal problems or another condition. Diet matters, but the symptom still needs proper clinical context.

The safest editorial answer is to treat diet as part of overall symptom support rather than as a precise explanation for a local vaginal symptom unless something more specific is evident. You can book a confidential consultation if you want a structured review rather than continuing to guess the cause.

Educational only. Clinical suitability must be confirmed following an appropriate consultation and assessment by a qualified healthcare professional. Results vary. Not a cure.

At a glance

Diet can shape wellbeing and menopause resilience, but it does not replace a cause-based explanation for vaginal dryness.

Diagnostic Differentiators

Key physical and clinical parameters

Diet role

Background support

Main direct driver usually

Hormonal or local tissue change

Worth improving

Yes

Not enough if

Symptoms are persistent

Critical Progressive Risk

Educational only. Dryness can have hormonal, inflammatory, pelvic-floor, medication-related and sexual-health causes, so treatment should follow assessment rather than guesswork.

General health matters Do not over-attribute Treat the cause
Detailed answer

Where poor diet may fit into the picture

Diet affects general health and can influence how women experience menopause and wellbeing, but it is usually too broad an explanation to account for ongoing vaginal dryness by itself.

Key Overlapping Symptom Triggers

The overlap is strongest when poor diet sits alongside weight change, fatigue, menopause symptoms or low mood, rather than when it is used as the only answer to a specific vaginal complaint.

Broad contributor Not a shortcut diagnosis

Balanced eating supports overall health

NHS balanced diet advice supports a wide-ranging, proportionate eating pattern rather than symptom-specific miracle foods.

Menopause guidance links healthy habits with symptom support

NHS and NHS trust menopause resources regularly include diet inside broader symptom and long-term health care.

No standard guidance treats poor diet as the main dryness diagnosis

Direct dryness guidance still points more strongly to hormones, irritants, medicines and arousal factors.

Poor diet can still matter indirectly

Low energy, weight issues, poor sleep and general wellbeing can all make symptoms feel harder to manage even when diet is not the core cause.

Most useful interpretation

Improving diet is sensible and often beneficial.

It should usually be viewed as supportive care unless the wider clinical picture suggests something more specific.

Patient safety

Why this question needs restraint

It is easy to turn “healthy habits help” into “poor diet caused this”, even when the evidence does not support that jump.

Diet is easy to blame

That can create guilt without necessarily bringing you closer to the right treatment.

General and local symptoms are not the same

Feeling unwell overall is different from identifying the main driver of a vaginal symptom.

Hormonal change remains more direct

If the dryness is menopausal or low-oestrogen, the tissue issue often needs more targeted care.

Healthy changes are still worthwhile

The answer is not to ignore diet, but to keep it in proportion to the actual symptom problem.

Why the symptom pattern matters

Dryness is a symptom, not a full diagnosis. The right plan depends on cause, tissue quality, symptom severity, urinary symptoms, pain pattern and menopause status.

A good consultation aims to identify the cause early so that you do not spend months trying the wrong products or blaming yourself for symptoms that are medically treatable.

Considerations

How to think about diet without oversimplifying dryness

Use diet improvement to support the body, while judging the symptom by its own pattern and triggers.

Helpful benchmark

If dryness remains intrusive despite better eating, or if the symptom clearly fits menopause or irritation, diet was probably never the whole explanation.

Keep perspective Use direct treatment when needed

Improve the basics

Balanced eating, enough calcium and vitamin D, and fewer ultra-processed habits still support health.

Do not expect instant local change

Diet improvements are valuable, but their effects are usually gradual and systemic rather than a quick lubrication response.

Treat friction and tissue symptoms directly

Lubricants, moisturisers and menopause treatment may still matter more for day-to-day comfort.

Escalate if the symptom pattern is specific

Bleeding, pain, urinary symptoms or clear postmenopausal dryness deserve more focused care.

Practical takeaway

A healthier diet is a good move for many reasons.

Persistent vaginal dryness still deserves a more direct explanation than poor diet alone in most cases.

Common concerns and myths

Myths about poor diet and dryness

These myths confuse broad health influence with a precise clinical diagnosis.

Myth: Poor diet is a common main cause of vaginal dryness

False. It may contribute to overall wellbeing, but standard dryness guidance points more directly to hormonal and local causes.

Myth: If I clean up my diet, I should not need other treatment

False. Better eating and direct symptom care often need to sit together.

Myth: If diet is not the main cause, it does not matter at all

False. General health still matters, even if it is not the full explanation for dryness.

Better lens

Think of diet as supportive context, not as a stand-alone answer unless the wider evidence really points that way.

Best next step

Improve general habits, but keep asking what is most directly driving the vaginal symptom itself.

Eligibility

When self-care may be enough and when to get checked

These signs help separate short-term symptom support from symptoms that need a proper medical review.

Mild pattern

Symptoms are mild, clearly linked to poor diet as a possible background contributor rather than a direct diagnosis and start improving with the right moisturiser, lubricant or trigger avoidance.

No red-flag bleeding

There is no bleeding after sex, no bleeding after menopause and no new abnormal discharge.

Daily life still manageable

Comfort, intimacy and bladder symptoms remain manageable while you try evidence-based self-care.

Clear follow-up plan

You know when to escalate if symptoms persist, worsen or start to affect intimacy, sleep or confidence.

Reassuring Signs Matrix (Green Flags)

Reasonable first steps at home usually include:

Using products designed for the vagina, such as vaginal moisturisers or water-based lubricants. Avoiding perfumed washes, douches and random oils or creams that can irritate tissue. Reviewing triggers such as friction, lack of arousal time, medication changes or menopause symptoms.

Indicators to Pause and Re-Evaluate (Red Flags)

Get a clinical review sooner if you notice:

Bleeding after sex, bleeding after menopause, or bleeding that keeps recurring. A new lump, ulcer, severe pain, foul discharge or symptoms suggesting infection. Persistent dryness, dyspareunia, urinary symptoms or repeated UTIs despite self-care.
When to escalate

Signs Demanding Immediate Clinical Evaluation

Dryness can be common, but it should not be brushed off if the symptom pattern changes or starts affecting pain, bleeding, bladder symptoms or quality of life. Access NHS 111 Support

Bleeding needs checking

Postmenopausal bleeding or repeated bleeding after sex should be assessed rather than assumed to be simple dryness.

Pain is not always “just dryness”

Pain can also reflect infection, pelvic floor spasm, vulval skin disease, prolapse or other causes that need a different plan.

Urinary symptoms matter

Frequency, urgency, recurrent UTIs or bladder discomfort can occur alongside GSM and deserve review.

Persistent symptoms deserve options

If symptoms are ongoing, ask about evidence-based treatment rather than cycling through unsuitable over-the-counter products.

This safety and escalation advice is purely educational and does not replace emergency medical care. If you are experiencing severe, worsening pain, heavy active bleeding, signs of systemic infection, acute urinary retention, or sudden incontinence, please contact NHS 111, your local GP, or an urgent care centre immediately.

Deep Clinical Context & Common Patient Inquiries

Why poor diet can feel like the obvious answer

When energy, mood or general wellbeing are low, it is natural to wonder whether diet is affecting intimate symptoms as well. Sometimes it probably contributes in the background. But a local symptom like vaginal dryness usually needs a more specific explanation than “my diet is not ideal”.That matters because vague explanations often lead to vague treatment.

Where healthy eating still belongs

NHS and NHS trust menopause guidance consistently supports healthier eating patterns as part of broader symptom and long-term health care. That is useful and sensible. It is just different from saying a poor diet is the primary direct cause of dryness in most women.Supportive habits and direct symptom care can coexist without contradiction.

What should move you beyond diet alone

  • Symptoms clearly fit menopause: think about low-oestrogen tissue change.
  • Dryness is painful or persistent: direct treatment may matter more than habit change alone.
  • Bleeding, discharge or urinary symptoms are present: assess a wider differential.
If you are improving diet but still do not know whether it is really relevant to your dryness, it is sensible to review whether the wider hormonal picture needs attention and judge the symptom in a more targeted way.
Regulatory resources

Authoritative UK Clinical Resources

Access peer-reviewed guidance from national healthcare bodies to support your understanding of pelvic health conditions.

NHS balanced diet guidance

NHS keeps the nutrition message grounded in overall health rather than promising a specific cure for vaginal dryness.Read NHS guidance

NHS menopause self-care guidance

NHS explains where healthy eating fits inside menopause self-care while still distinguishing it from direct dryness treatment.Read NHS guidance

CUH menopause lifestyle guidance

Cambridge University Hospitals provides a practical example of how diet advice is framed as supportive, not as a stand-alone local symptom cure.Read NHS guidance

Next step

Schedule a Confidential Specialist Evaluation

If poor diet as a possible background contributor rather than a direct diagnosis is affecting comfort, intimacy or confidence, WHC can help clarify the cause, explain evidence-based options and decide whether you need moisturisers, vaginal oestrogen, broader menopause care or another pathway.

Clinical reference materials used for this FAQ

Educational only. Individual treatment suitability can only be determined by a qualified professional after a thorough consultation and assessment. Results vary. Not a cure.

  • Clinical Assessment: Individual suitability is determined by a clinician; results may vary.
  • Non-NHS: Private healthcare provider only. Pricing varies by treatment and site. Availability varies by clinical location.

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