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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

relationship strain can be real it is not inevitable in every couple communication changes the trajectory

Women’s Health Clinic FAQ

Can untreated dyspareunia cause relationship problems?

Women often ask this when they can already feel tension growing and want to know whether they are overreacting or seeing the early signs of a real problem.

Direct answer

Yes, untreated dyspareunia can create relationship problems, especially when pain leads to avoidance, misunderstanding, guilt, pressure or loss of confidence around intimacy. That does not mean every relationship will deteriorate or that painful sex automatically reflects a weak partnership. The risk rises when the symptom stays unexplained, is repeatedly pushed through, or starts reshaping how partners communicate about closeness. Treating the pain and the communication pattern early often matters more than trying to keep intercourse going at all costs.

They are usually not overreacting. Intimate pain often affects both the body and the relationship dynamic around safety, expectation and closeness. 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

Relationship strain usually comes less from the diagnosis label itself and more from the cycle of pain, fear, silence, guilt and uncertainty that can grow around it.

Diagnostic Differentiators

Key physical and clinical parameters

Most likely downstream effect

Reduced intimacy, tension or misunderstanding

Often reinforced by

Silence, pain anticipation and pressure to continue sex

Not the same as

Proof the relationship is failing or that desire is absent

Still assess for

The physical pain cause as well as the communication fallout

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.

pain can spill into wider life do not make it inevitable cause-focused treatment still matters
Detailed answer

What this usually means clinically

When intercourse becomes unreliable or painful, couples often start adapting without a shared plan. One person may fear causing harm, the other may fear disappointing or rejecting their partner, and both can drift into silence.

Key Overlapping Symptom Triggers

That does not mean the relationship is weak. It means painful sex is a stressor that often changes how touch, reassurance and closeness are negotiated.

track the knock-on effects keep the cause visible

What can happen over time

Relationship strain often starts with withdrawal, unpredictability or a growing sense that intimacy has become emotionally risky rather than simply pleasurable.

Why it can become more entrenched

The longer pain remains untreated or unexplained, the easier it is for guilt, resentment, fear of rejection or pressure around intercourse to become part of the pattern.

What this does not automatically prove

Relationship problems do not prove the cause is mainly psychological or relational. They often develop because the pain is real and unresolved.

Why early review still matters

Earlier medical review plus clearer communication often prevents the symptom from becoming a shared source of confusion and injury.

The practical takeaway

Untreated dyspareunia can strain closeness even in supportive relationships.

The risk rises most when the symptom is left unexplained and the couple adapts without a safe plan.

Patient safety

Why this question matters

This matters because women are often told to focus on the physical symptom alone, even when the relationship dynamics are already changing around it.

It prevents minimising the impact

It validates that intimacy strain is a common downstream effect of repeated pain.

It avoids oversimplifying the mechanism

It stops couples blaming the relationship for a symptom-driven problem.

It supports earlier intervention

It supports earlier symptom treatment before avoidance becomes the default.

It improves support planning

It creates space for communication or couple-based support when needed.

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

The useful review question is not simply whether the relationship is coping, but how painful sex is changing safety, communication, pressure and closeness between partners.

Useful benchmark

The impact is already clinically relevant if painful sex is changing how you communicate, making either partner fearful of intimacy, or leading to repeated avoidance or conflict.

name the downstream pattern escalate before it spreads

Track the pattern beyond intercourse

Track whether intimacy problems happen only around penetration or are spreading into wider touch and closeness.

Name the knock-on effects

Name guilt, pressure, resentment or confusion early rather than waiting for them to harden.

Check for wider drivers

Check whether a hidden physical driver such as dryness, focal pain or deep pelvic symptoms is still under-treated.

Escalate when the burden is widening

Escalate sooner if the relationship is becoming organised around avoidance or misinterpretation.

Better framing

Treat the relationship strain as understandable and workable.

Do not wait for it to become a crisis before widening the support plan.

Common concerns and myths

Common myths

These myths often isolate couples just when clearer language would help most.

Myth: If the symptom is intimate, the downstream effects should stay minor.

Reality: even strong relationships can feel significant strain when intimacy becomes painful and unpredictable.

Myth: A knock-on effect proves one single cause.

Reality: relationship impact does not prove one simple cause or make the physical pain less real.

Myth: If the impact is psychological or relational, physical treatment matters less.

Reality: better communication and physical treatment usually need to run together.

Better frame

Think shared stressor, not personal failure.

Safer expectation

Aim for safer communication and flexible intimacy while the symptom is being treated.

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

Why this impact can grow if nothing changes

Relationship problems usually grow not because one partner is wrong, but because repeated pain changes what sex and touch now mean to both people and the couple has to adapt somehow.If you want help separating the physical pain driver from the knock-on effects it is now creating, you can review painful sex symptoms with the clinical team.

What to mention in a review

  • whether pain is leading to guilt, avoidance or fear of disappointing a partner
  • whether touch beyond intercourse now feels affected too
  • whether the relationship needs psychosexual or couple-based support alongside medical care

When the impact means the plan needs widening

If painful sex is now driving persistent conflict, emotional distance, pressure to continue intercourse or a collapse in confidence, the plan should widen beyond symptom control alone.
Regulatory resources

Authoritative UK Clinical Resources

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

Couples therapy – Rotherham Doncaster and South Humber NHS Foundation Trust

An NHS service page used to describe what couples therapy usually focuses on: communication, patterns of conflict, support and thoughtful joint decision-making.Read NHS guidance

A comparison of cognitive-behavioral couple therapy and lidocaine in the treatment of provoked vestibulodynia: study protocol for a randomized clinical trial - PMC

A dyspareunia-relevant couple-therapy protocol used to keep relationship-focused pages aligned with the evidence base rather than generic counselling claims.Read source

Impact of a multidisciplinary vulvodynia program on sexual functioning and dyspareunia - PubMed

A multidisciplinary program study used to support integrated care wording where dyspareunia affects sexual function, distress and relationships.Read source

Next step

Schedule a Confidential Specialist Evaluation

If painful sex is starting to affect communication, emotional safety or closeness in your relationship, WHC can help review both the symptom and its knock-on effects.

  • 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.