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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

no evidence of benefit do not replace standard care homeopathic language is not anatomy

Women’s Health Clinic FAQ

What homeopathic treatments exist for prolapse?

Homeopathy often enters the conversation when women want the gentlest possible option or feel wary of examinations, devices or surgery.

Direct answer

There is no scientific evidence that homeopathic treatments improve pelvic organ prolapse. Homeopathy does not restore pelvic support, strengthen the pelvic floor or correct organ descent, and it should not replace established prolapse management such as pelvic floor muscle training, pessaries or specialist review. If a woman chooses to use homeopathy at all, it should only be as a personal complementary choice and not as a substitute for evidence-based care.

That emotional context matters, but it does not change the fact that prolapse is a structural pelvic-floor problem and homeopathy has no proven role in treating it. You can book a prolapse review if you want a clearer clinical explanation of symptom stage, risk factors and management choices.

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

This is one of the clearest low-evidence areas: homeopathy may be chosen personally, but it should not be framed as prolapse treatment.

Diagnostic Differentiators

Key physical and clinical parameters

Proven benefit for prolapse?

No

Can it restore support?

No

Safer role

Personal complementary choice only

What should stay central

Evidence-based prolapse care

Critical Progressive Risk

Educational only. Pelvic organ prolapse, pregnancy-related symptoms and activity choices still need individual assessment. Results vary, and conservative care or surgery should never be oversold as a universal cure.

keep anatomy central respect the preference but not the claim do not delay review
Detailed answer

Why homeopathy needs a very clear boundary

Some therapies live in a grey area where symptom support may still be arguable. Homeopathy is much harder to justify as prolapse treatment because there is no credible mechanism or evidence that it changes pelvic support.

Key Overlapping Symptom Triggers

That makes it especially important not to let hopeful language blur the underlying anatomical problem.

clear boundary needed comfort should not distort evidence

Prolapse is a support problem

The condition depends on muscles, connective tissue, pressure and organ descent, not on a symptom pattern that a homeopathic remedy has been shown to correct.

Authoritative guidance points elsewhere

Standard prolapse management discussions focus on physiotherapy, pessaries, review and surgery rather than homeopathic prescribing.

Delay is the main clinical risk

Women may keep trying increasingly hopeful remedies while bladder, bowel or bulge symptoms become more intrusive.

Personal preference still deserves respect

A respectful answer can acknowledge that someone values homeopathy while staying clear that it is not evidence-based prolapse treatment.

The responsible message

Homeopathy should not be used to define or drive prolapse care.

The more the prolapse affects function, the less appropriate it becomes to rely on it as the main plan.

Patient safety

Why the answer needs firmness

Some questions can be answered with a nuanced "maybe as an adjunct". This one needs a clearer line so women are not left guessing whether a low-evidence route might still fix a structural problem.

It avoids false equivalence

A personal complementary preference is not the same as an evidence-based treatment option.

It protects function

Bladder, bowel and prolapse progression issues deserve more direct management than homeopathy can offer.

It respects autonomy honestly

Women can still make personal choices without being misled about the clinical limits.

It reduces delay through reassurance language

Vague "everyone is different" wording can become unsafe if it obscures the lack of evidence.

Why the wider context matters

A prolapse question is rarely answered by anatomy alone. Symptoms, childbearing plans, bladder and bowel function, previous surgery and tissue quality all change what the most sensible advice looks like.

A helpful consultation should explain what is likely, what is uncertain, and where self-management ends and clinician-led review becomes more important.

Considerations

How to stay safe if homeopathy is still of interest

The key safety step is to keep homeopathy separate from the core prolapse-management decisions rather than treating it as the main pathway.

Useful benchmark

If a woman is avoiding pelvic floor assessment, pessary discussion or review because of homeopathy, the balance has tipped the wrong way.

personal choice separate from treatment do not blur the roles

Do not stop standard care

If you are already using physiotherapy, pessary care or follow-up, homeopathy should not displace them.

Review symptom progression honestly

Bulging, emptying difficulty or pain are more clinically useful than whether a remedy feels aligned with your preferences.

Treat functional decline as a hard stop

Worsening function should prompt review even if you prefer low-intervention care.

Be cautious with bundled alternative plans

Packages that combine homeopathy with other low-evidence claims can sound coherent while remaining clinically weak.

Practical bottom line

Homeopathy may be a personal complementary choice.

It is not a clinically supported prolapse treatment.

Common concerns and myths

Myths about homeopathy and prolapse

The most unhelpful myth is that a gentle-sounding therapy must therefore be a safe main answer to a structural condition.

Myth: If homeopathy is gentle, it is a reasonable first prolapse treatment.

Reality: gentleness does not create evidence or anatomical benefit.

Myth: If symptoms feel calmer, the prolapse must be improving.

Reality: prolapse management still has to be judged by function and examination, not by hopefulness alone.

Myth: If you dislike surgery, homeopathy becomes the natural alternative.

Reality: pelvic floor physiotherapy and pessaries are the more established non-surgical alternatives.

Better lens

Differentiate personal comfort with a therapy from evidence that it treats the condition.

Safer expectation

Keep the core prolapse decisions anchored to evidence and function.

Eligibility

When a prolapse can be monitored and when to get reviewed

Mild prolapse symptoms can often be managed conservatively, but some symptom patterns still need a proper examination.

Symptoms are mild and predictable

You have pressure, dragging or a bulge sensation, but you are still emptying your bladder and bowel reasonably well and the symptoms settle with rest or symptom-aware changes.

Conservative measures are helping

Pelvic floor work, avoiding constipation and reducing heavy strain are improving symptoms enough for routine follow-up rather than urgent escalation.

There is no red-flag bleeding or severe pain

There is no new bleeding from exposed tissue, severe vaginal pain, fever or sudden inability to pass urine.

You know when to ask for help

You are not trying to self-manage through worsening bladder emptying, repeated infections, ulceration, or symptoms that are clearly limiting day-to-day function.

Reassuring Signs Matrix (Green Flags)

Reasonable first steps often include:

Doing regular pelvic floor muscle training with proper technique and asking for pelvic health physiotherapy if you are unsure you are contracting well. Avoiding constipation, reducing heavy lifting and addressing a chronic cough or repeated straining that keeps increasing downward pressure. Using a pessary or other conservative support if advised, especially when surgery is not wanted now or childbearing is not complete.

Indicators to Pause and Re-Evaluate (Red Flags)

Arrange a medical review sooner if you notice:

Difficulty emptying your bladder, needing to reduce the prolapse to pass urine or stool, or repeated urinary tract infections. Bleeding, ulceration, foul discharge, severe vaginal pain, or tissue protruding and becoming sore or difficult to reduce. Symptoms that are worsening despite sensible conservative measures, or a new prolapse after surgery, birth or other major pelvic events.
When to escalate

Signs Demanding Immediate Clinical Evaluation

Prolapse is often not dangerous, but persistent bladder, bowel, pain or exposed-tissue symptoms should not be normalised away. Review becomes more important when function is changing. Access NHS 111 Support

Bladder emptying matters

Voiding difficulty, recurrent infections or needing to manually support the prolapse to pass urine or stool are reasons to seek assessment rather than endless self-management.

Symptoms can change after key life events

After childbirth, surgery, heavy strain or menopause-related tissue change, symptoms can become more intrusive and may justify a different management plan.

Conservative treatment is still treatment

Pelvic floor physiotherapy, symptom-aware activity changes and pessaries are legitimate management options, not a sign that your symptoms are being dismissed.

Seek urgent help if the picture is not straightforward

Severe pain, inability to pass urine, significant bleeding, or symptoms that feel out of keeping with a typical prolapse pattern need prompt medical review.

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 women still ask even when the evidence is weak

Questions about homeopathy often reflect more than medicine choice. They may reflect fear of surgery, embarrassment about internal examination, or frustration with symptoms that feel exposing and private. A respectful answer should recognise those motives without allowing them to distort the prolapse advice itself.Compassion and clinical clarity can sit together.

Where a firmer plan becomes important

If the prolapse is affecting bladder emptying, bowel function, activity or tissue comfort, that symptom pattern deserves direct management. If you feel pulled between wanting the gentlest possible route and wanting a route that is actually effective, you can review prolapse management with the clinical team and compare the non-surgical evidence-based options more clearly.
  • Do not let low-evidence preferences replace prolapse-specific assessment.
  • Keep reviewing what the prolapse is doing functionally over time.
  • Choose clearer conservative options if symptoms are starting to shape daily life.
Regulatory resources

Authoritative UK Clinical Resources

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

Herbal medicines and complementary therapies - NHS

NHS complementary-therapy guidance explaining where homeopathy sits outside standard medical treatment.Read NHS guidance

Pelvic organ prolapse - NHS

NHS prolapse overview clarifying the recognised symptom pattern and the treatments routinely used for prolapse.Read NHS guidance

Recommendations | Pelvic floor dysfunction: prevention and non-surgical management | NICE

NICE recommendations showing where non-surgical pelvic floor management is evidence-based in contrast to homeopathic treatment claims.Read NICE guidance

Next step

Schedule a Confidential Specialist Evaluation

If you want a low-intervention prolapse plan that still stays clinically grounded, WHC can help you compare the evidence-based conservative options properly.

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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