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  • Verified Content: Approved by the Women’s Health Clinic Clinical Team.
  • Educational Use: This is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
  • Clinical Assessment: Individual suitability is determined by a clinician; results may vary.
  • Non-NHS: Private healthcare provider only. Pricing varies by treatment and site. Availability varies by clinical location.
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    If you need urgent help, use NHS 111. For a life-threatening emergency, call 999.

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Dr Farzana Khan

Dr Farzana Khan

Verified

Dr Farzana Khan qualified as an MD from the University of Copenhagen in 2003. She has worked in dermatology and obstetrics & gynaecology across the North of England and completed her MRCGP (CCT, 2013) and the Diploma of the Faculty of Sexual & Reproductive Health (2013). Her clinical focus is vaginal health—including dryness/GSM, sexual function concerns, lichen sclerosus, and comfort or volume changes. She offers careful assessment, discusses medical and conservative options first, and considers selected regenerative or aesthetic treatments where appropriate. Dr Farzana also trains clinicians as a KOL/Trainer with Neauvia, Asclepion Laser, and RegenLab (since 2023). Ongoing CPD includes IMCAS, CCR, ACE and expert training in women’s intimate fillers, PRP, and polynucleotide injectables. Her approach is simple: clear explanations, realistic expectations, and shared decision-making. Authored and medically reviewed by Dr Farzana Khan.

MD MRCGP DFFP
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Non-Surgical Laser Vaginal Rejuvenation

Non-Surgical Laser Vaginal Rejuvenation for Dryness, Laxity & Intimate Comfort Concerns — assessed carefully and explained honestly.

Start with a conversation

Something has changed. Now let’s talk about whether laser treatment is the right route.

Many women enquire about laser vaginal rejuvenation because of dryness, reduced comfort, a feeling of looseness, mild leakage, or tissue changes after childbirth, perimenopause or menopause.

At The Women’s Health Clinic, Nu‑V is discussed as a non-surgical, assessment-led option — not as a promise to reverse ageing, cure menopause symptoms, or replace proper diagnosis.

No obligation. No pressure. Just a proper conversation about what may be suitable for you.

Nu‑V laser pathway

What women often ask

The first step is understanding the concern clearly.

“Is this dryness menopause-related, or something else?”

“Things feel looser since childbirth. Is laser enough, or would surgery be more appropriate?”

“I want a non-hormonal option, but I also want to know what the evidence really says.”

“I’ve seen ‘vaginal rejuvenation’ online. What does that actually mean medically?”

We listen first

No rush, no judgement. You explain what has changed and what you are hoping to improve.

We assess properly

Laser is not suitable for every symptom. We look for causes, red flags and alternatives before recommending treatment.

We explain honestly

We explain what laser may help, what it cannot do, where evidence is limited, and when another pathway may be better.

Women-centred care Assessment first Non-surgical Nu‑V pathway

Non-surgical laser vaginal rejuvenation

Nu‑V Laser Vaginal Rejuvenation

Many women begin exploring vaginal laser treatment because something has changed.

You may notice vaginal dryness, reduced comfort, a feeling of looseness, changes after childbirth, reduced confidence during intimacy, or symptoms linked to perimenopause and menopause.

Our role is to understand what is causing those changes and whether laser treatment may be an appropriate option as part of a wider treatment pathway. Every woman is different. Assessment comes first. Treatment comes second.

Main treatment focus

Nu‑V non-surgical laser treatment, with internal and external assessment-led treatment planning.

Broader context

If your concern is better suited to pelvic floor therapy, local menopause care, injectables, regenerative support or surgery, we will explain that clearly.

Educational only. Not diagnosis or medical advice. Suitability is confirmed after consultation and assessment. Results vary. Not a cure.

Nu-V laser vaginal rejuvenation consultation at The Women’s Health Clinic
Non-surgical • consultation-led • evidence-aware

Could Laser Treatment Be Right For You?

Women commonly enquire about laser treatment because of: Vaginal dryness | Mild vaginal laxity | Reduced comfort | Changes after childbirth | Menopause-related tissue changes | Selected stress leakage concerns Assessment helps determine whether laser treatment is likely to be appropriate for your situation.

Treatment type

Clinic-based, non-surgical laser treatment.

Typical appointment time

Nu‑V treatment itself is typically around 15 minutes, with consultation and preparation handled separately.

Course

Some women start with one treatment; others may be advised to consider a structured course or maintenance.

Best suited for

Selected mild-to-moderate tissue quality, comfort, dryness, laxity or confidence concerns after assessment.

Not designed for

Severe prolapse, significant structural muscle separation, unexplained bleeding, active infection or symptoms needing medical diagnosis first.

Confidential Nu-V laser vaginal rejuvenation consultation

Your first step

You do not need to know whether laser is right before getting in touch

Some women arrive asking specifically for Nu‑V. Others simply know that comfort, lubrication, tissue quality, sensation or confidence has changed.

That is why assessment comes first. We discuss whether laser is suitable, whether first-line menopause care or pelvic floor support should come first, or whether a broader vaginal rejuvenation pathway is more appropriate.

assessment firstNu‑V focusedhonest evidence discussion
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Video Gallery

Watch patient stories, case studies and media features

Explore our video gallery to hear real patient experiences and selected media coverage featuring our work and approach.

  • Karen
  • Jill & Tracy
  • Emma Bristol
  • Emma Notts
  • Sara
  • Actress
  • Kimberley
  • Nu-V Idea
  • Lyndsey
  • Emma TV
  • Sara R2
  • Explainer
  • Katy Leeds
  • PRP Story
  • Sean LED
  • Sam Story
What is it?

What is laser vaginal rejuvenation?

Laser vaginal rejuvenation is a commonly used phrase for non-surgical energy-based treatment of selected vaginal and vulval tissue concerns. At WHC, the focus is Nu‑V: a clinic-based laser pathway discussed only after consultation and assessment.

The term “rejuvenation” is not a diagnosis. It is a consumer term. That is why we explain the anatomy, the limits of treatment, the evidence, the risks and the alternatives before you decide whether to proceed.

A practical definition

Nu‑V is a non-surgical laser treatment pathway designed to support tissue remodelling and selected intimate wellness concerns.

It is not a surgical tightening operation and it is not a guaranteed cure for dryness, pain, urinary symptoms or sexual concerns.

Vagina vs vulva

The vagina is the internal canal. The vulva is the external intimate area, including the labia, clitoris and vaginal opening.

Laser treatment planning may involve internal tissue, external tissue or both, depending on the concern and suitability.

What it is not

It is not a fountain of youth, a permanent tightening operation, or a replacement for vaginal oestrogen, pelvic floor therapy or surgical repair where those are more appropriate.

The language matters because women deserve informed consent, not hype.

A balanced way to think about it

Laser vaginal rejuvenation may be considered where selected tissue-quality, hydration, mild laxity or comfort concerns fit the treatment mechanism. It should not be used to avoid assessment for infection, prolapse, vulval skin disease, pelvic floor dysfunction, unexplained bleeding or more significant structural change.

mild-to-moderate concernsassessment firstevidence-awarenot one-size-fits-all
Who? Who may consider it

Who may consider Nu‑V laser treatment?

Nu‑V may be discussed with women whose symptoms and anatomy suggest a non-surgical laser route could be appropriate.

After childbirth

Some women notice mild laxity, altered sensation, reduced comfort or confidence changes after vaginal birth, tearing, episiotomy or multiple births.

mild laxityreduced sensationcomfort changespelvic floor context

Perimenopause and menopause

Hormonal change can affect the vulva, vagina, bladder and urethra. For GSM symptoms, first-line care such as moisturisers, lubricants and vaginal oestrogen should be discussed before or alongside any laser conversation.

drynessburningpainful sexurinary symptoms

Women seeking a non-hormonal discussion

Some women cannot, prefer not to, or are cautious about hormonal options. Laser may be discussed carefully, especially where first-line options are unsuitable or insufficient, but it is not automatically the next step.

Women comparing laser with surgery

Laser targets more superficial tissue layers. Surgery targets deeper structural support. If the main issue is significant muscle separation, prolapse or structural change, laser may not be the right treatment.

laser vs surgerymild-to-moderate concernsassessment first
Concerns, safety and suitability

Concerns we assess before Nu‑V

Women enquiring about laser vaginal rejuvenation often describe one or more of the following concerns.

vaginal drynessmild vaginal laxitypainful or uncomfortable intimacyreduced lubricationtissue-quality changemild stress leakagepostpartum changeGSM-related symptomsreduced confidence

These symptoms do not automatically mean laser is suitable. Similar symptoms can have hormonal, dermatological, pelvic floor, prolapse, infection-related or neurological causes.

When laser may not be suitable

Treatment may need to be delayed, avoided or referred for specialist review first if there is:

pregnancybreastfeedingactive vaginal/vulval infectionunexplained bleedingabnormal or overdue cervical screening concernundiagnosed lesionsignificant prolapsepelvic radiation or mesh historybleeding disorder or anticoagulation issuesevere pain needing diagnosis

Why assessment matters

Dryness, pain, laxity, leakage or tissue change can have several causes. Laser is one possible pathway, not the answer to every concern.

Realistic expectations

Laser may support tissue quality, hydration or mild laxity in selected women. It does not repair deep muscle separation and does not guarantee sexual or urinary outcomes.

Risks and limitations

As with any energy-based intimate treatment, side effects and rare complications must be discussed.

temporary irritationspotting or dischargeswellinginfection riskthermal injuryincomplete improvement
Why? Reasons women ask about laser

Why women seek Nu‑V laser treatment

Women often want a non-surgical route that feels discreet, practical and less invasive than surgery. The decision should still be clinically careful.

Functional reasons

Dryness, friction, mild laxity, discomfort, reduced lubrication and mild leakage are common reasons women ask about laser treatment.

Life-stage reasons

Childbirth, breastfeeding, perimenopause, menopause, ageing and hormonal shifts can all affect tissue quality and comfort.

Emotional reasons

Many women delay asking for help because the topic feels embarrassing. A respectful consultation can make the next step clearer.

Comfort and hydration

Laser may be discussed where the aim is to support tissue comfort, hydration and vaginal wellness in selected women.

Mild support and laxity

Nu‑V targets superficial tissue remodelling; it is not a deep muscle repair for significant structural laxity.

Confidence through clarity

For many women, feeling heard and understanding the options is as important as the treatment itself.

Maintenance mindset

Any benefit from laser is expected to be time-limited. Maintenance or repeat treatment may be discussed where appropriate.

Benefits women may be looking for

These are goals for discussion, not guaranteed outcomes.

intimate comfortvaginal dryness supporttissue qualitymild laxityconfidenceselected mild leakage concerns

Results vary from person to person. Suitability is always confirmed after consultation and assessment.

How it works

How Nu‑V laser treatment works

The treatment itself is short, but the clinical decision should be careful.

1. Consultation

We review your symptoms, medical history, menopause or postpartum context, expectations and possible red flags.

2. Assessment

Where clinically appropriate, assessment helps decide whether the concern is suitable for laser or needs another route first.

3. Nu‑V session

Nu‑V is a short in-clinic treatment, typically around 15 minutes, with internal and/or external treatment planning depending on suitability.

4. Aftercare

You receive written aftercare, including what to avoid temporarily and when to contact the clinic.

Surface vs scaffolding

Laser is different from surgery

Laser treatment targets the vaginal lining and nearby superficial tissue layers. Surgery targets deeper muscles, fascia and structural support. This difference matters when choosing the right pathway.

Nu‑V laser

Best considered for selected mild-to-moderate tissue quality, dryness, comfort or laxity concerns where superficial remodelling may help.

Surgical vaginoplasty or repair

May be more appropriate for significant structural laxity, deep muscle separation, prolapse-related symptoms or birth-trauma repair.

Recovery and aftercare

Most women can return to normal gentle activities soon after treatment, but mild spotting, discharge, swelling, warmth or irritation may occur.

You will be told what is expected and when to contact the clinic.

You may be advised to avoid intercourse, tampons, douching, swimming, hot baths, heavy lifting, cycling or strenuous exercise for a short period.

Exact aftercare depends on your treatment plan and clinical assessment.

Results and maintenance

What to expect over time

Response varies. Planning should be individual rather than one-size-fits-all.

When might results be noticed?

Some women feel early change; others notice gradual changes as tissue remodelling develops over weeks and months.

How long do results last?

Any benefit is expected to be time-limited and may reduce over time. Maintenance may be discussed where appropriate.

Why a course may be discussed

A structured course may be recommended where symptoms, tissue quality and goals suggest that one treatment alone may not be enough.

The Women’s Health Clinic approach to Nu-V laser vaginal rejuvenation
About the clinic

Why women choose The Women’s Health Clinic

WHC was built around the idea that women should be able to talk openly about intimate health without shame, embarrassment or dismissal.

Sensitive, respectful conversations

Many women arrive feeling uncertain or embarrassed. We make the conversation calm, respectful and practical.

Clear options, not pressure

We discuss Nu‑V alongside other routes where relevant: menopause care, pelvic floor support, injectables, regenerative options or surgical referral.

The Nu‑V story

Nu‑V was developed from a determination to provide a non-surgical option for women experiencing intimate changes linked to childbirth, ageing and menopause.

Broader vaginal rejuvenation pathway

This page focuses on laser treatment. For the full treatment menu, see our broader vaginal rejuvenation page.

Pricing

Nu‑V pricing

Non-surgical laser vaginal rejuvenation

We believe in clear pricing. Current treatment fees are shown below; please use the pricing page for the latest published fees and consultation information.

Single treatment

Nu‑V

A starting point for women who want to begin with one treatment and review progress.

£599

Single Nu‑V treatment

Structured course
Triple package

Nu‑V

A triple package may be recommended where a structured course is more suitable.

£1,200

Triple Nu‑V package

Maintenance

Annual top-up

Some women choose maintenance or top-up treatment as part of longer-term care.

£400

Annual top-up

Consultation

A free initial call can help you understand the service. A clinical consultation is required before treatment so that symptoms, goals, suitability and treatment choices can be properly assessed.

Why some women choose a package

A single session may suit some women; a triple package may be more suitable where a structured course is recommended.

Latest fees

Please check the pricing page for the latest fees, consultation details and any updates to packages or maintenance options.

Experience

How women often describe the experience

For many women, the most important part is feeling listened to and not rushed.

While every experience is individual, common themes in patient feedback include feeling listened to, appreciating clear explanations, feeling less embarrassed than expected, and feeling supported throughout the process. Results and experiences vary.

Feeling listened to

A good treatment journey starts with respectful conversation.

Clear explanations

Understanding what may help and what may not helps women make calmer decisions.

Supported throughout

Women often value aftercare and follow-up as much as the procedure itself.

Patient journey

A typical Nu‑V journey

Every woman’s story is different, but many follow a similar path.

1. She notices a change

Dryness, laxity, discomfort, reduced confidence or mild leakage becomes harder to ignore.

2. She researches laser

She sees many claims online and wants an honest explanation.

3. She books a free call

She can ask questions before committing to clinical assessment.

4. She has assessment

Symptoms, anatomy, risks and alternatives are reviewed.

5. She receives a plan

That may include Nu‑V, conservative care, menopause care, pelvic floor support or another treatment route.

Frequently asked questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Clear answers about Nu‑V laser vaginal rejuvenation, evidence, suitability and aftercare.

Nu‑V is a non-surgical laser treatment pathway used at The Women’s Health Clinic for selected vaginal and vulval tissue concerns after assessment.

No. It is a broad consumer term. That is why we focus on symptoms, anatomy, suitability and evidence rather than using the phrase as a diagnosis.

Nu‑V may be discussed for selected concerns such as vaginal dryness, mild laxity, reduced comfort, tissue quality change, mild leakage concerns or changes after childbirth or menopause. Suitability is not automatic.

For genitourinary symptoms of menopause, established options such as vaginal moisturisers, lubricants and vaginal oestrogen should be discussed. Laser may be explored only after careful assessment and informed consent.

No. Laser targets more superficial tissue layers. Surgery, such as vaginoplasty, targets deeper muscle and fascial support. They are different pathways for different concerns.

No. Significant prolapse, deep muscle separation or major structural laxity usually needs specialist assessment and may need pelvic floor physiotherapy or surgical opinion rather than laser.

The Nu‑V treatment itself is typically around 15 minutes, although consultation, assessment, preparation and aftercare discussion are separate.

Some women start with one session; others may be advised to consider a structured course. This depends on symptoms, suitability and goals.

Most women return to gentle daily activities quickly, but mild irritation, spotting, discharge or swelling may occur. You may be advised to avoid intercourse, tampons, swimming, hot baths, heavy lifting and vigorous exercise for a short period.

Possible effects include temporary irritation, swelling, spotting, discharge or discomfort. Rare but more serious risks may include burns, scarring, infection, chronic pain or altered sensation. Risks are discussed before treatment.

Laser may not be suitable during pregnancy or breastfeeding, with active infection, unexplained bleeding, abnormal screening concerns, undiagnosed lesions, significant prolapse, pelvic radiation or mesh history, bleeding disorders or severe pain needing diagnosis first.

Your cervical screening history and any abnormal bleeding or lesion concerns should be reviewed. If screening is overdue, abnormal or clinically concerning, treatment may be delayed pending appropriate assessment.

Evidence is mixed. Some studies and clinical experience report improvements, especially for dryness and comfort, but guideline bodies remain cautious and some sham-controlled trials have shown smaller or non-significant differences. We discuss this honestly at consultation.

Some women who cannot or prefer not to use hormones ask about non-hormonal options. This requires individual medical review, especially after cancer treatment or if local oestrogen is contraindicated or needs specialist input.

A single Nu‑V treatment is £599. A triple package is £1,200. Annual top-up treatment is £400. Please check the pricing page for the latest fees.

Yes. A consultation is important so that symptoms, goals, suitability, alternatives and risks can be properly reviewed before treatment.

Your next steps

1. Book your free consultation
2. Talk through what has changed
3. Have a clinical assessment if appropriate
4. Understand whether Nu‑V is suitable
5. Move forward only if it feels right for you

Evidence and regulation

What does the evidence say?

The evidence around vaginal laser is not one-dimensional. There is biological rationale and positive observational research, but there are also regulatory cautions and sham-controlled studies showing mixed results. That is why we frame Nu‑V as an assessment-led option rather than a guaranteed solution.

Why it may help

Laser energy can stimulate controlled tissue response in water-rich mucosal tissue, aiming to support collagen remodelling and tissue quality.

Where evidence is promising

Some studies and clinical experience report improvements in dryness, comfort, tissue quality and mild laxity in selected women.

Where caution remains

Some randomised sham-controlled trials show mixed or non-significant differences, and guideline bodies remain cautious, especially for menopause-related GU symptoms.

Guideline-aware position

For genitourinary symptoms of menopause, established options such as vaginal oestrogen, lubricants and moisturisers should be discussed. Laser should be presented with clear informed consent, not as first-line routine care or a cure.

Responsible wording matters

We avoid saying

cure, reverse menopause, restore youth, permanent tightening, risk-free, painless, guaranteed sexual improvement.

We prefer saying

may support, selected women, suitability assessed, evidence is mixed, results vary, risks and alternatives discussed.

How Nu‑V compares with other options

Nu‑V laser

Non-surgical, clinic-based, short treatment; targets superficial tissue remodelling. Often discussed for mild-to-moderate concerns.

Surgical vaginoplasty

Surgical pathway for deeper structural laxity or muscle/fascial repair. Longer downtime and different risk profile.

Radiofrequency

Another energy-based approach using heat rather than laser light. Mechanism, protocol and evidence differ by device.

O‑Shot / PRP

Regenerative injection pathway using platelet-rich plasma. Different mechanism and treatment target from laser.

For a wider comparison of all intimate treatment routes, see our broader vaginal rejuvenation overview.

Expert Medical Articles

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8 April 2018

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04 April 2018

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19 March 2018

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13 March 2018

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7th March 2018

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28th February 2018

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19th February

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08 Feb 2018

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02 Feb 2018

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Still not sure where to start?

Browse the wider treatment pages or book a free consultation.

Patient FAQs

Browse our women’s health FAQs

Find clear answers to common questions about consultations, treatments, symptoms, preparation, aftercare and pricing.

  • Clinical Assessment: Individual suitability is determined by a clinician; results may vary.
  • Non-NHS: Private healthcare provider only. Pricing varies by treatment and site. Availability varies by clinical location.

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