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faq Vaginal Laxity (postnatalmenopause support)

Can I combine laser/RF with PRP or polynucleotides for laxity?

Yes—some clinics combine energy-based treatments (vaginal laser or radiofrequency) with regenerative injectables (platelet-rich plasma, PRP, or polynucleotides) for mild, entry-focused vaginal laxity. The aim is to pair surface comfort and hydration with tissue conditioning. However, evidence is early and mixed, so combinations should follow a strong block of pelvic floor rehabilitation and GSM care, with clear goals, governance and review. Educational only. Results vary. Not a cure.

Clinical Context

Likely to benefit from combinations. Women with mild, entry-focused symptoms persisting after excellent pelvic floor rehab (activation, endurance, timing) and GSM care. Aim for modest, functional goals—calmer sting, fewer micro-tears, less air-trapping—rather than promises of “”tightening””.

Who should delay or avoid now. Pregnancy; active BV/thrush/UTI; fever or malodorous discharge; new post-menopausal bleeding; recent pelvic/perineal surgery without clearance; suspected prolapse beyond the introitus; pain-dominant/overactive pelvic floor (needs down-training and psychosexual support first); confirmed fish allergy if considering polynucleotides.

Alternatives and next steps. Double-down on supervised PFMT; schedule a vaginal moisturiser 2–4 nights weekly; use a generous compatible lubricant (water-based for versatility/condoms; silicone-based for longest glide; avoid oil with latex); refine cough/constipation/impact loads. Add or stop adjuncts based on your tracked outcomes rather than fixed packages.

Evidence-Based Approaches

NHS (patient-friendly foundations): Practical guides for pelvic floor exercises and self-care for vaginal dryness underpin first-line care.

NICE guideline (NG123): Emphasises supervised pelvic floor muscle training first-line and clear criteria for escalation—principles that frame selection before any device/injectable is considered. NICE NG123.

MHRA (UK regulator): Information on medical devices, intended use and vigilance supports safe adoption and reporting for intimate procedures. MHRA – medical devices.

Cochrane reviews (energy-based therapies): Method-rigorous overviews of vaginal laser/radiofrequency highlight small trials, short follow-up and heterogeneous protocols—supporting cautious, audit-backed use and modest expectations. Cochrane Library – vaginal laser/RF.

Peer-reviewed GSM context: Public abstracts explain how oestrogen decline drives mucosal dryness, pH change and microbiota shifts, clarifying why GSM care remains central even if you add procedures. PubMed – GSM overview.