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faq Vaginal Laxity (postnatalmenopause support)

Can platelet-rich plasma (PRP) improve tissue support for laxity?

PRP is your own concentrated platelets injected to signal repair. For mild, entry-focused laxity it may help comfort and perceived support in selected cases, but evidence is early and small, so it’s not a first-line fix. Foundations—pelvic floor rehab and genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) care—come first; PRP is an optional adjunct when goals remain. Risks include bruising, spotting, transient soreness and rare infection. Educational only. Results vary. Not a cure.

Clinical Context

Who might consider PRP? Postnatal or peri-/post-menopausal women with mild, entry-focused concerns persisting after an excellent block of pelvic floor training and GSM care—especially if symptoms feel mechanical rather than muscle-driven.

Who should avoid or delay? Pregnancy; active vaginal infection; fever or foul discharge; new post-menopausal bleeding; very recent pelvic/perineal surgery; bleeding disorders/anticoagulation; pain-dominant or overactive pelvic floor without prior down-training. Suspected prolapse beyond the introitus or levator injury needs uro-gynae input first.

Alternatives and next steps. Continue supervised pelvic floor rehab, maintain GSM care (scheduled moisturiser; compatible lubricant—water-based for versatility/condoms; silicone-based for longest glide; avoid oil with latex), and consider scar-aware therapy if a perineal scar alters entrance shape. PRP is an adjunct, not a replacement for these foundations.

Evidence-Based Approaches

NHS basics (patient-friendly): Conservative care anchors management—see step-by-step pelvic floor exercises.

NICE guidance (clinical): Principles from urinary incontinence/prolapse emphasise supervised pelvic floor muscle training before escalation and support careful selection for procedures (NICE NG123).

Regulatory context (UK): Device, product marking and vigilance information help ensure appropriate selection and safety reporting (MHRA medical devices).

Systematic-review context: Cochrane overviews of PRP in female pelvic/soft-tissue conditions highlight heterogeneous, small studies and short follow-up—supporting cautious, adjunctive use (Cochrane Library – platelet-rich plasma).

Peer-reviewed summaries: Public abstracts discuss PRP mechanisms and early intimate-health applications, underscoring limited, evolving evidence rather than established benefit (PubMed – PRP reviews).