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faq Vaginal Laxity (postnatalmenopause support)

Are there lifestyle changes that support tissue firmness?

Yes. Everyday steps can improve the feel of support: supervised pelvic floor muscle training, GSM care (scheduled moisturiser, compatible lubricant, and—if acceptable—local vaginal oestrogen), load management (cough/constipation, graded return to impact sport), sleep and strength training, smoke/alcohol moderation, and gentle vulval skincare. These measures reduce friction, build endurance and help tissues tolerate movement—often before any procedure is considered. Educational only. Results vary. Not a cure.

Clinical Context

Who benefits most from lifestyle measures? Postnatal women with reduced “grip”, air trapping or light stress leaks; peri-/post-menopausal women with GSM-related dryness making tissues feel “loose yet sore”. PFMT plus friction control often outperforms device-first approaches for these patterns.

Who may need more than lifestyle? People with clear prolapse beyond the introitus, suspected levator avulsion, or a tethered/malpositioned perineal scar that distorts the entrance. These warrant uro-gynae or surgical opinions after conservative care. Marked, persistent pain or new bleeding needs medical review.

Next steps. Start a supervised 12-week PFMT block; schedule moisturiser 2–4 nights weekly and match lubricant to need; tidy cough/constipation; begin twice-weekly strength training and re-introduce impact gradually. Track wins (leaks, air noises, tampon support, comfort with penetration) for a 6–12 week review.

Evidence-Based Approaches

NHS, patient-friendly guidance: Practical advice on pelvic floor exercises and on recognising and managing vaginal dryness (self-care, moisturisers/lubricants, when to seek help).

NICE guidance: The urinary incontinence and prolapse guideline recommends supervised pelvic floor muscle training as first-line and sets criteria for escalation—principles that underpin conservative care for laxity-type concerns (NICE NG123).

RCOG resources: Patient information on pelvic floor dysfunction and recovery after perineal tears helps link postnatal support, scars and symptom change.

Cochrane reviews: Systematic reviews show pelvic floor muscle training improves continence and pelvic floor symptoms, supporting a supervised programme before procedural options (Cochrane Library – PFMT reviews).

Pathophysiology of GSM: Peer-reviewed overviews on PubMed describe oestrogen-related epithelial changes and pH shifts, explaining why moisturiser/lubricant ± local oestrogen improves comfort and the perceived “support feel”.