Penn's Women's Health Newsletter
 

Spring 2005

Sex During Pregnancy
Benefits of Kegel Exercises
Egg Freezing – Reality or Fiction?

Benefits of Kegel Exercises

The term “Kegel” may be a familiar one to a mother. Often doctors recommend Kegel exercises during pregnancy to help strengthen the pelvic floor. The pelvic floor includes muscles between the hips that support the bladder and other organs above the pelvis. These muscles may weaken after childbirth, which can cause urinary stress incontinence -- accidental urination -- when you laugh, cough, sneeze, jump or run. If time alone has not healed your pelvic floor to a satisfactory condition, you may need to introduce Kegels into your daily life.

Kegels involve tightening the area between the thighs to help restore the tone of the muscles that surround the opening of the urethra, vagina and anus. An easy way to tell which muscles you should exercise is to perform the Kegel technique while urinating; if you can stop the flow of urine when tightening, then you know that you are contracting the correct muscles. Although this is a good check for accurate Kegel technique, it is not recommended that you perform your Kegel exercises while urinating.

There are several Kegel variations that you can try:

  • The Basic Kegel - Squeeze and release the pelvic floor muscles. Start gradually and build up repetitions over time.
  • Elevator Kegels - Visualize the muscles of your vagina as a building, with the base of your pelvic floor as the “lobby” and the top floor at your belly button. Raise the elevator slowly (tighten the muscles) from the bottom floor to the top, give a slight hold and bring the elevator back down, slowly relaxing your muscles from top to bottom.
  • Sustained Kegels - Contract the pelvic floor muscles and hold for a count of 10. Repeat 10 times. If you cannot hold them this long initially, hold them as long as you can. Eventually, you will be able to do 10-second holds.
  • Progressive Kegels - Squeeze briefly and hold for five seconds. Then squeeze harder and hold for five seconds. Squeeze as hard as possible and hold for five seconds. Release a little, hold for five. Release a little more, hold for five. Release completely.

As with any exercise program, start gradually. When your muscles begin to strengthen, increase the number of Kegels you do every day and the length of time you hold each contraction. By making Kegel exercises a part of your daily life, you will improve vaginal tone, and even help prevent urinary incontinence later in life.

If you find that Kegels are not solving your pelvic floor or bladder issues, then discuss the situation with your gynecologist or primary care physician. Your doctor may recommend that you see a urogynecologist, a doctor who specializes in bladder and pelvic floor disorders in women.

 


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Kegel Exercises - Encyclopedia Article
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