Improve your pelvic floor with these five exercises

Expert Advice 25 Oct 22 By

Lift and squeeze.

By Brooke Turner, founder of Balance Fitness & Nutrition

Having a functional pelvic floor and incorporating pelvic floor muscle training into your overall fitness routine can help strengthen your pelvic floor muscles, as well as reduce the severity of symptoms of incontinence or pelvic organ prolapse.

Pregnancy and childbirth can compromise these muscles, as can age, menopause, surgery, repeated heavy lifting, chronic coughing, constipation and excessive weight.  The pelvic floor is made up of layers of muscles and other connective tissues that stretch like a hammock, that attach to the bones at the bottom of the pelvis.

The pelvic floor plays an important role in supporting the bladder, uterus, intestines and bowel and in the function of these in addition to sexual health and function.

Most can benefit from incorporating regular pelvic floor exercises into their daily routine, particularly those who are experiencing incontinence or prolapse. Signs and symptoms include:

  • Leaking when you sneeze, laugh, cough, jump, run
  • Urgency to go to the toilet
  • A lump bulging out of your vagina that you can see or feel
  • A heavy sensation or dragging in the vagina
  • Difficulty emptying your bladder or bowel
  • Lower back pain
  • Weak urine stream
Getty Images

Pregnancy and childbirth can compromise your pelvic floor.

For women who may have a tight (hypertonic) pelvic floor, relaxing, lengthening and down training these muscles, rather than working them, would be preferable. Signs of a hypertonic pelvic floor include:

  • Incomplete or straining when emptying the bowels
  • Pelvic, low back and/or hip pain
  • Painful sex
  • Vaginismus
  • Urinary incontinence
  • Urinary urgency, urinary frequency, or slow flow of urine

One of the simplest ways to find the pelvic floor is to lie down on your back with your knees bent and feet on the floor.

  • Inhale, on an exhale contract your muscles like you would if you were trying to stop the flow of urine whilst on the toilet, hold for 5-10 seconds. This is your front wall.
  • Inhale and think about lengthening and relaxing those muscles.
  • Exhale again and this time lift and squeeze like you would if you were in an important meeting and trying to stop passing wind. Hold that contraction for 5–10 seconds and release.
  • Inhale and visualise lengthening and relaxing those muscles.
  • Now visualise how a jellyfish moves through the water. On a full pelvic floor contraction you want to SQUEEZE the front and back wall together and LIFT like you’re going up an elevator.
  • On an exhale squeeze and lift both front and back wall, hold 5–10 seconds and release.
  • We also want to think about activating our transverse abdominis which is our deep layer of ab muscles that acts to support and stabilise the lower back and surrounding muscles.

Incorporate the below exercises into your regular workout or daily routine to build a more functional pelvic floor, exhaling to activate on the effort phase of each movement.

(Instagram)

The founder of Balance Fitness & Nutrition, Brooke is a qualified nutritionist, exercise scientist and personal trainer, specialising in exercise and nutrition for pregnancy and motherhood.

5 exercises to improve your pelvic floor

Brooke’s top tips

Add them in regularly! Try to habit stack your pelvic floor exercises to build them into your daily routine. Maybe you do them whilst you are making or ordering your morning coffee or whilst doing your skincare or make up routine.

Always train with a suitably qualified fitness professional! When it comes to exercising, always opt for a trainer or group fitness instructor who is qualified in pre and post natal exercise. Find a certified trainer near you so that you can move with confidence and in a way that you enjoy, that is both safe and effective for your journey.

Book an appointment with a Women’s Health Physiotherapist. They are the eyes on the inside and can determine if you are activating your pelvic floor correctly, your strength, endurance, if you need to work on down training your pelvic floor (hypertonic pelvic floor), prescribing a program specific to you and any other pelvic and musculoskeletal concerns.

Utilise Brooke’s Returning to Exercise and Nutrition for PostNatal Recovery eBook for more pregnancy and motherhood friendly workouts, recipes and tips to help stay healthy, strong and happy during your journey.

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