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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

acupuncture evidence is mixed dyspareunia data are limited not a first-line substitute

Women’s Health Clinic FAQ

Can acupuncture treat dyspareunia effectively?

Women usually ask this when they want a non-drug option for a chronic pain pattern or when previous treatments have felt incomplete.

Direct answer

Possibly for some women, but the evidence is too mixed and indirect to present acupuncture as an established treatment for dyspareunia itself. Some research on sexual dysfunction and chronic pain suggests acupuncture may help selected symptoms for some people, but dyspareunia-specific evidence is limited and heterogeneous. That means acupuncture is better viewed as a possible adjunct in selected chronic-pain contexts rather than a first-line replacement for diagnosis, pelvic-floor treatment, menopause care or treatment of infection or structural disease. The safer answer is “maybe, in the right context, with modest expectations”.

That makes sense, but acupuncture needs to be framed according to the quality of evidence actually available rather than according to hopeful generalisations about natural pain relief. You can book a pelvic pain consultation if you want a clearer, cause-focused assessment rather than generic reassurance.

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

Acupuncture may be worth discussing as an adjunct in selected chronic-pain settings, but it is not supported strongly enough to stand in for a proper dyspareunia work-up.

Diagnostic Differentiators

Key physical and clinical parameters

Best fit for

Selected chronic-pain overlap cases

Evidence state

Heterogeneous and low certainty

Main risk

Using it instead of diagnosis or better-supported care

Still review if

Pain is persistent, red-flagged or clearly structural

Critical Progressive Risk

Educational only. Painful sex, pelvic pain and vaginal symptoms still need individual assessment. Results vary, and no single explanation or treatment should be oversold as a universal cure.

limited evidence needs plain wording support does not equal cure avoid replacing diagnosis
Detailed answer

What this usually means clinically

Acupuncture evidence is often broader than dyspareunia itself, drawing from sexual dysfunction or chronic pelvic pain studies rather than from large, high-quality painful-sex trials.

Key Overlapping Symptom Triggers

That makes it hard to know who is most likely to benefit, and it makes strong promises especially inappropriate.

supportive not definitive match the mechanism

Some women do find it helpful

Some women do report symptom relief with acupuncture, particularly when chronic pelvic pain, stress or broader pain amplification overlaps with dyspareunia.

The evidence base is narrower than people expect

Systematic reviews still describe large evidence limitations, including heterogeneous study designs and relatively little dyspareunia-specific certainty.

Product choice and context still matter

If the pain is clearly due to menopause-related tissue change, infection, focal vestibular pain or a structural pelvic cause, acupuncture is unlikely to replace the treatments those conditions actually need.

Red flags still overrule self-care

As an adjunct, it may still be discussed for selected women who understand the limits of the evidence and do not let it delay more direct care.

A cautious clinical view

Acupuncture may have a supportive role for some women with chronic-pain overlap.

It should not be sold as a proven stand-alone dyspareunia treatment.

Patient safety

Why this question matters

Complementary treatments are often most helpful when the evidence is described honestly enough that women can choose them without false hope or unnecessary dismissal.

It lowers false hope

It keeps claims proportionate to the actual evidence.

It still leaves room for symptom relief

It still allows for adjunctive care where a woman finds value in it.

It protects diagnosis quality

It prevents diagnosis or direct treatment from being displaced by lower-certainty interventions.

It improves treatment sequencing

It encourages outcome tracking rather than open-ended faith in the approach.

Why the wider context matters

A useful painful-sex assessment usually asks about anatomy, hormones, infection risk, pelvic floor tone, recent life events, cycle timing and the emotional fallout of repeated pain.

That is why a confident one-line explanation is often less helpful than a structured review that separates what is most likely, what needs ruling out and what may overlap.

Considerations

What usually helps decision-making

Acupuncture is easiest to justify when it is being added to a clearer diagnostic and treatment plan rather than used instead of one.

Useful benchmark

If the rationale for acupuncture is chronic pain overlap or symptom support, that is more defensible than claiming it targets the core dyspareunia cause directly in every case.

use it deliberately stop if it irritates

Check why sex hurts

Check whether there is a broader chronic-pain or pelvic-pain context rather than an obviously local or structural cause alone.

Check whether it is helping

Check whether first-line and cause-specific treatments have already been considered properly.

Check for practical downsides

Check whether expectations are modest and measurable rather than cure-focused.

Check when to escalate

Check whether symptoms such as bleeding, infection-like pain or severe dryness still need more direct treatment first.

Better framing

Use acupuncture, if at all, as an adjunctive option inside a clearer plan.

That is usually the most evidence-aware and least misleading position.

Common concerns and myths

Common myths

These myths often make acupuncture sound either useless in every context or strongly proven in contexts where it is not.

Myth: Natural or complementary means it is proven.

Reality: acupuncture may help some women symptomatically, but certainty for dyspareunia remains limited.

Myth: If it helps a little, that settles the diagnosis.

Reality: low-certainty evidence is not the same as strong first-line guidance.

Myth: If evidence is limited, it can never have any place.

Reality: adjunctive use is different from replacing diagnosis or direct cause-focused treatment.

Better frame

Keep the claims modest and the care plan broader than acupuncture alone.

Safer expectation

Expect the evidence limits to stay part of the conversation, not hidden behind hopeful wording.

Eligibility

When painful sex can be monitored and when to get reviewed

Pain with sex is common, but persistent or worsening pain should not be normalised. Pattern, triggers and associated symptoms help decide how urgently it needs assessment.

The trigger pattern is fairly clear

You can describe whether the pain is mainly on entry, deeper in the pelvis, related to dryness, linked with your cycle or tied to a recent life event such as childbirth or menopause.

There are no obvious red-flag symptoms

There is no fever, offensive discharge, heavy bleeding, sudden severe pelvic pain or major change in bladder or bowel function alongside the painful sex.

Simple support is helping somewhat

Lubrication, slower arousal, pelvic floor relaxation or avoiding clear irritants is making symptoms a little easier rather than the pain steadily escalating.

You know when to escalate

You are not trying to push through repeated pain, recurrent bleeding, or severe anxiety about penetration without asking for proper clinical support.

Reassuring Signs Matrix (Green Flags)

Reasonable first steps often include:

Tracking where the pain is felt, what it feels like and whether it is triggered by penetration, deep thrusting, dryness, the menstrual cycle or a recent pelvic event. Using gentle lubrication, allowing enough arousal time and avoiding fragranced products or friction that clearly worsens symptoms. Considering pelvic floor relaxation or physiotherapy if tension, guarding or fear of penetration seems to be part of the picture.

Indicators to Pause and Re-Evaluate (Red Flags)

Arrange a medical review sooner if you notice:

Bleeding after sex, persistent vaginal discharge, itching, ulceration, fever or pelvic pain that suggests infection, inflammation or a tissue problem rather than simple friction. Pain that is severe, worsening, linked to deep pelvic symptoms, or associated with period pain, bowel pain, bladder pain or a new pelvic mass. Pain that repeatedly stops penetration, causes major distress, or remains unchanged despite lubrication, pacing and sensible self-care.
When to escalate

Signs Demanding Immediate Clinical Evaluation

Painful sex is often treatable, but the right treatment depends on the cause. Review becomes more important when symptoms persist, spread beyond intercourse or start affecting confidence, relationships or routine examinations. Access NHS 111 Support

Location changes the differential

Entry pain, burning and stinging suggest a different set of causes from deep internal pain or cyclical pelvic pain.

Life-stage clues matter

Menopause, breastfeeding, childbirth recovery, pelvic surgery and sexual health exposures can all shift which diagnoses are more likely.

Pelvic floor reactions can become part of the problem

Once pain becomes expected, the body may tense protectively and make penetration harder even when the original driver was something else.

Urgent symptoms still need urgent help

Sudden severe lower abdominal pain, fever, heavy bleeding, feeling acutely unwell or symptoms suggesting torsion, PID or another acute pelvic condition should not wait.

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

Where this approach is most likely to help

  • chronic pelvic pain or wider pain-sensitisation overlap
  • a wish for adjunctive symptom support rather than cure promises
  • an existing diagnosis-and-treatment plan that acupuncture would sit alongside

What makes the evidence harder to interpret

Women often ask about acupuncture because they want one more option, not because they believe it should replace all conventional care. That distinction is important and reasonable.If you want help deciding whether conservative, hormonal, pelvic-floor or diagnostic treatment should come first, you can review painful sex symptoms with the clinical team.

When not to lean on self-treatment alone

Do not let acupuncture delay assessment for bleeding after sex, infection-like symptoms, severe vaginal dryness or deep pelvic pain that still needs conventional diagnostic work-up.
Regulatory resources

Authoritative UK Clinical Resources

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

Does acupuncture improve sexual dysfunction? A systematic review - PubMed

A systematic review used for evidence-aware wording that acupuncture research in sexual dysfunction is heterogeneous and not dyspareunia-specific enough for strong claims.Read source

Use of Acupuncture for Adult Health Conditions, 2013 to 2021: A Systematic Review - PubMed

A broad evidence review used to support cautious language that much acupuncture evidence remains low or moderate certainty across adult health conditions.Read source

Effectiveness of physical therapy interventions in women with dyspareunia: a systematic review and meta-analysis - PubMed

A recent systematic review and meta-analysis used for evidence-aware wording around pelvic floor physiotherapy and non-pharmacological management.Read source

Next step

Schedule a Confidential Specialist Evaluation

If you are considering acupuncture as part of a broader painful-sex plan, WHC can help place it in a more evidence-aware context.

  • 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.