10 Silent Signs You Have a Pelvic Floor Disorder
Roughly 25 percent of all women in the U.S. have a pelvic floor disorder. Here are the signs you might have one.
What is the pelvic floor?
Men and women both have a pelvic floorโa hammock-shaped cluster of muscles, ligaments, connective tissues, and nerves that support the bladder and rectumโbut in women, it also helps the uterus and vagina function properly. Thatโs why pelvic floor disorders are particularly common in women. In fact, a recent analysis of data from five yearsโ worth of National Health and Nutritional Examination Surveys (2005 to 2010), which included nearly 8,000 non-pregnant women, found that 17 percent suffered from moderate-to-severe urinary incontinence and 9.4 percent with fecal incontinence, both common types of pelvic floor disorders.
You can’t control your bladder
If you suffer from urinary incontinenceโa lack of bladder control that results in leakingโyou technically have a pelvic floor disorder. โSome people have stress incontinence, which is leakage caused by coughing, laughing, or sneezing,โ says Kimberly Ferrante, MD, uro-gynecologist at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City. Women who do heavy weight-lifting or CrossFit-type workouts also commonly experience incontinence because of all the pressure lifting and strenuous exercises put on the bladder. (Here’s what your bladder is secretly trying to tell you.)
Your vagina feel weird
If your vagina feels heavy, full, or aches and gets worse throughout the day, that could be a sign of a pelvic floor disorder, according to the National Institutes of Health. (Find out the 13 things your vagina is trying to tell you.)
You canโt control your bowels
A leaky stool, or fecal incontinence, may be embarrassing but itโs the second most common type of pelvic floor disorder, according to Columbia University Medical Center. Sometimes itโs caused by another type of condition like Crohnโs disease, multiple sclerosis, or even diabetes and can affect both men and women, but often it becomes a problem in otherwise healthy women post-menopause, says Dr. Ferrante. The pelvic floor muscles relax and contract in a coordinated way to help you eliminate stoolโwhen those muscles malfunction, you may find yourself racing for the bathroom.
Your vagina has a mysterious bulge
If you suddenly feel a very noticeable bulge or like thereโs something in your vagina, donโt worry, itโs probably not a tumor and is more likely vaginal prolapse. โPeople can see the bulge if they look, itโs vaginal tissue that comes out of the vagina; sometimes itโs gradual and sometimes itโs all of a sudden after a bad cough,โ says Dr. Ferrante. โOther women say they feel like theyโre sitting on an egg, or if itโs really big, a grapefruit that makes it hard to walk or sit down.โ Prolapse is most common in women who have given birth, particularly early in the postpartum stage, and is basically a result of weak pelvic muscles and supporting tissues that cause things to fall out of place.
Sex is painful
Sex should feel good, not hurt, so if you experience pain or muscle spasms while doing the deed, you could have a pelvic floor disorder. โSpasms in the pelvic muscles can cause pain during intercourse and some patients canโt have sex because of the pain,โ says Dr. Ferrante. (These are 11 more reasons why sex might be painful.)
You have trouble peeing
If you have difficulty urinating or feel like you canโt fully empty your bladder no matter how hard you try, it could be a urinary tract infection but it could also be a pelvic floor disorder, especially if it persists.
Youโre constipated
Usually, your pelvic floor muscles relax and contract in just the right way at just the right time to let you easily empty your bowels. But, if youโre constantly straining to go, it could be a sign of a pelvic floor disorder.
Youโre overweight
โObesity can make pelvic floor issues worse because of all the pressure being put on the muscles,โ says Dr. Ferrante. In fact, a higher body mass index (BMI) was associated with a greater chance of having one or more pelvic floor disorders, according to a recent analysis published in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology.
You have a lung disorder
Anything that causes frequent coughing such as asthma, lung cancer, or even heavy smoking can lead to a pelvic floor disorder because of the strain it puts on the pelvic floor, says Dr. Ferrante.