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faq Vaginal Laxity (postnatalmenopause support)

Will treatment affect childbirth plans or future deliveries?

Most conservative options—pelvic floor physiotherapy, vaginal moisturisers and lubricants, and (if appropriate) local oestrogen—do not restrict future pregnancy or birth choices. Non-surgical procedures (laser/RF or injectables like PRP, polynucleotides, superficial HA boosters) are usually paused during pregnancy and early postpartum, but they don’t prevent a later vaginal birth. Surgery that changes introital geometry (e.g., perineal scar revision or posterior repair) requires recovery time and obstetric planning for future deliveries. Educational only. Results vary. Not a cure.

Clinical Context

Who may proceed now without affecting future birth choices? Women focusing on conservative care: supervised pelvic floor physiotherapy, scheduled vaginal moisturiser, and a generous, compatible lubricant (water-based for versatility/condoms; silicone-based for longest glide; avoid oil with latex). Local vaginal oestrogen can be considered when not pregnant and is usually paused during pregnancy; your clinician will advise on use while breastfeeding.

Who needs more tailored planning? Those considering perineal scar revision or a site-specific posterior repair; women with prior OASI/complex tears; or anyone with suspected prolapse beyond the introitus. Here, timing around pregnancy and individualised obstetric counselling are important. Devices/injectables should be avoided in pregnancy and deferred until postpartum healing is complete.

Next steps now. Confirm drivers (function vs comfort vs structure) with a pelvic health assessment. Build a 12-week pelvic floor block, optimise GSM care, and keep a short diary (air-trapping episodes, micro-tears, sting scores, tampon retention, ease at first penetration). Use this to judge whether procedural steps are needed now or better timed after family plans are clearer.

Evidence-Based Approaches

NHS (patient-friendly): Practical guides for pelvic floor exercises and postnatal recovery support conservative management and future-birth planning.

NICE guideline NG123: Recommends supervised pelvic floor muscle training as first-line for pelvic floor symptoms and sets criteria for escalation and referral, useful both before and after pregnancies. NICE – urinary incontinence and pelvic organ prolapse.

RCOG patient information: Clear advice on perineal tears (including third/fourth-degree) and future births, plus pelvic floor dysfunction resources to aid shared decisions in subsequent pregnancies. RCOG – perineal tears during childbirth; RCOG – pelvic floor dysfunction.

Cochrane review: Antenatal and postnatal pelvic floor muscle training reduces urinary incontinence risk and supports long-term function—helpful context when planning pregnancies and avoiding unnecessary procedures. Cochrane – PFMT for prevention and treatment of UI.

Peer-reviewed overview (PubMed): Mode of delivery and parity influence pelvic floor disorders over time; counselling weighs symptoms, anatomy and preferences. See public abstract summaries via PubMed – mode of delivery and pelvic floor disorders.