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faq Vaginal Laxity (postnatalmenopause support)

What does NICE guidance say about energy devices for laxity?

NICE does not recommend routine use of vaginal lasers or radiofrequency specifically for “vaginal laxity”. UK guidance focuses on pelvic floor rehabilitation first; energy devices for related symptoms (e.g., GSM dryness, urinary issues) are typically under special arrangements for clinical governance and audit because evidence is limited and heterogeneous. If considered, it should follow a strong physio/GSM phase, with clear goals, consent and review. Educational only. Results vary. Not a cure.

Clinical Context

Who might consider energy devices (adjuncts only)? People with mild, entry-focused symptoms persisting after a high-quality block of pelvic floor training and optimised GSM care—e.g., reproducible air-trapping or early-penetration discomfort that feels mechanical rather than muscular.

Who should avoid or delay? Anyone with red flags (fever, malodorous discharge, visible haematuria, new post-menopausal bleeding), unclear diagnosis, suspected prolapse beyond the introitus, or perineal scar malposition. These warrant diagnostic clarity and, where appropriate, uro-gynae or surgical opinions.

Alternatives & next steps. Continue supervised pelvic floor rehab (activation, endurance, timing), maintain GSM care (scheduled moisturiser; compatible lubricant—water-based for versatility/condoms; silicone-based for longest glide; avoid oil with latex), and address cough/constipation/impact loads. Decide on any adjunct only if goals remain and governance boxes are ticked.

Educational only. Results vary. Not a cure.

Evidence-Based Approaches

NICE menopause guideline (context for GSM): Recommends vaginal moisturisers/lubricants and considering low-dose local vaginal oestrogen when symptoms affect quality of life; devices are not first-line for GSM or laxity (NICE NG23).

NICE urinary incontinence/prolapse: Emphasises supervised pelvic floor muscle training first-line and criteria for escalation—principles informing selection before any device is considered (NICE NG123).

NICE interventional procedures (energy for GSM): Publications on vaginal laser for GSM use special arrangements language (governance, consent, audit) reflecting limited evidence and heterogeneity—relevant when counselling about devices in adjacent indications (NICE Interventional Procedures – search vaginal laser).

Cochrane reviews (energy-based therapies): Systematic reviews highlight small trials, short follow-up and mixed methods for laser/RF in GSM-type symptoms—hence cautious, adjunctive positioning (Cochrane Library – vaginal laser/radiofrequency).

NHS patient information (foundations): Practical guides to pelvic floor exercises and vaginal dryness help anchor conservative care and red-flag awareness.

Regulatory perspective: UK device marking, intended use and adverse event reporting—key to safe adoption for any intimate device—sit with the national regulator (MHRA medical devices).