What if I also have prolapse—do I need a uro-gynae review first?
What if I also have prolapse—do I need a uro-gynae review first? If you have signs of pelvic organ prolapse (a bulge, tampon/cup slippage, the need to splint for bowels, or bothersome heaviness), a uro-gynaecology or pelvic health assessment should come before any device or injectable. Pelvic floor rehab and genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) care remain first-line; procedures won’t correct fascia or move a scar. Educational only. Results vary. Not a cure.
Detailed Medical Explanation
What if I also have prolapse—do I need a uro-gynae review first? Yes—if symptoms or examination suggest pelvic organ prolapse (POP), targeted assessment should precede any energy-based treatment (laser/RF) or superficial injectables (platelet-rich plasma, polynucleotides, or low-viscosity hyaluronic-acid boosters). Why? Because perceived “laxity” comes from different layers: structure (fascial support, perineal body, scar position), function (pelvic floor activation, endurance, timing), and surface comfort (GSM dryness, dyspareunia, micro-tears). Procedures can condition surface comfort; they do not repair fascia, reposition a low-set scar, or correct a defect causing a bulge, air-trapping, or tampon slippage. A uro-gynae review clarifies what is structural, what is functional, and what is friction-related so you invest in the right step first.
Clues that point toward POP or a structural driver. A feelable or visible bulge at the entrance, tampon/cup slippage during sport, the need to splint the perineum or vagina to open bowels, gaping with air-trapping, a low-set/tethered perineal scar, or persistent sense of heaviness/drag. These are different to GSM-dominant symptoms such as burning, itching, “paper-cut” splits and entry sting. If structural clues are present, continuing to repeat surface-level procedures risks cost and disappointment.
What a good assessment includes. History (pregnancies, instrumental birth, tears, menopausal status, bowel/urinary symptoms), day-to-day impact, and your goals. Pelvic floor exam checks activation without bearing down, the endurance of 6–10-second holds, quick squeezes, and reflex timing (the pre-cough “knack”). Visual inspection reviews perineal body bulk, scar position/mobility, and entrance shape; a POP-Q or equivalent staging may be used to grade support. Dermatological contributors (e.g., lichen sclerosus) are ruled out, and GSM is addressed because dryness alone can mimic “looseness” by increasing friction and guarding.
Foundations are still the engine of change. Conservative measures help across all layers. That means a supervised pelvic floor programme; regular vaginal moisturiser (2–4 nights weekly); and a generous, compatible lubricant whenever friction is higher (water-based for versatility and condom-safety; silicone-based for the longest glide; avoid oils with latex). If acceptable, low-dose local vaginal oestrogen re-matures mucosa over 2–6 weeks and reduces micro-tears. These steps often transform comfort and confidence even when a mild prolapse exists.
Where procedures fit (and where they don’t). If, after strong foundations and with no significant structural defect, a mild, entry-focused gap remains (focal sting, recurrent fourchette “paper-cuts”, unpredictable early penetration), a cautious adjunct—energy-based sessions or superficial injectables—may help comfort and glide. They will not tighten the vagina, “lift” a prolapse, or move a scar. If POP is symptomatic or a scar/perineal body deficit is confirmed, targeted options (pessary, perineal scar revision, site-specific repair) are more proportionate, with pelvic floor rehab protecting results.
Planning your pathway. We introduce one change at a time and review at 6–12 weeks using practical markers—sting scores, micro-tear/spotting days, ease at first penetration/speculum, air-trapping episodes, tampon stability, and confidence with movement. For a plain-English view of steps and sequencing, see common clinical concerns and our summary of how treatment steps are sequenced. These pages show where uro-gynae review, conservative care, and any adjuncts sit in order.
Safety first. Defer any procedure with active BV/thrush/UTI, fever, malodorous discharge, recent pelvic/perineal surgery, or new post-menopausal bleeding. Use UK-approved, UKCA/CE-marked products/devices within their intended purpose; if a brand name is included for clarity elsewhere, “® belongs to its owner”.
Clinical Context
Who should prioritise uro-gynae review? Anyone with a bulge, tampon/cup slippage on active days, the need to splint for bowels, audible air-movement with gaping, or a clearly low-set perineal scar. These features suggest a structural driver where pessary fitting, scar-aware care, or repair may outperform surface procedures.
Who may start with conservative care alone? Women whose main issues are dryness-related sting and micro-tears (GSM) and coordination gaps (activation, endurance, timing) without signs of a defect. Here, pelvic floor rehab plus moisturiser/lubricant and, if suitable, local oestrogen often resolve the day-to-day problems classed as “laxity”.
Next steps now. Keep a 6–12-week diary of sting (0–10), micro-tear/spotting days, first-penetration/speculum ease, air-trapping episodes, tampon stability, and confidence with movement. Bring it to review—your data makes shared decisions clearer and prevents overtreatment.
Evidence-Based Approaches
NHS (patient-friendly overview): Plain-English guidance on symptoms, conservative options, pessaries and surgery for POP helps you spot when specialist review is sensible. NHS – pelvic organ prolapse.
NICE NG123 (urinary incontinence & POP): Recommends supervised pelvic floor muscle training as first-line, guidance on pessaries and referral thresholds, and shared decision-making for surgery. NICE NG123.
RCOG patient information: Clear explanations of prolapse, recovery after childbirth and when to seek specialist help; useful for interpreting scar-related symptoms. RCOG – pelvic organ prolapse.
Cochrane Library: Systematic reviews support pelvic floor muscle training for prolapse-related symptoms and quality of life, reinforcing conservative-first pathways and measured escalation. Cochrane – PFMT for POP.
PubMed (public abstracts): Research links obstetric injury (levator/perineal) with later pelvic floor disorders, clarifying why structural assessment matters in postnatal laxity. Mode of delivery & pelvic floor disorders.
