Episode 1789 - Treating the hypertonic pelvic floor

#PTonICE Daily Show

Dr. Jess Gingerich // #ICEPelvic // www.ptonice.com

In today's episode of the PT on ICE Daily Show, ICE Pelvic faculty member Jess Gingerich defines hypertonicity as it relates to the pelvic floor and the role of the pelvic floor in the body as contractile tissue.

Take a listen to learn how to better serve this population of patients & athletes or check out the full show notes on our blog at www.ptonice.com/blog.

If you're looking to learn more about our live pregnancy and postpartum physical therapy courses or our online physical therapy courses, check our entire list of continuing education courses for physical therapy including our physical therapy certifications by checking out our website. Don't forget about all of our FREE eBooks, prebuilt workshops, free CEUs, and other physical therapy continuing education on our Resources tab.

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EPISODE TRANSCRIPTION

JESSICA GINGERICHGood morning PT on ICE podcast. My name is Dr. Jessica Gingerich, and I am on faculty with the Pelvic Division here at ICE, and I am coming to you today to talk about the hypertonic pelvic floor. We got a great question in our online course about hypertonicity in the pelvic floor around pregnancy. And so before I dive into this, when we talk about hypertonicity in the pelvic floor, we really don't care necessarily if it's prenatal, pregnant, postnatal, really anywhere in the lifespan. We're gonna treat it relatively the same. there may be some factors that we think about at each stage of life but relatively we're treating it the same.

DEFINING A HYPERTONIC PELVIC FLOOR So first and foremost the definition of a hypertonic pelvic floor and the reason I put that in air quotes is because we will hear so many different things overactive pelvic floor tight pelvic floor is when the pelvic floor muscles are in a contracted state um or a spasm And so, the symptoms of this can be leakage, heaviness, pressure, a dragging sensation in the vagina, painful insertion, whether that is during intercourse, a tampon insertion, vaginal exam, or anything else. urinary urgency, frequency, constipation, incomplete emptying that could be of the bladder or of the bowels, coccyx pain, pelvic pain, low back pain, and hip pain. So when you have your client that comes in and they say, oh my pelvic floor is so weak because I pee all the time I just can't control it. recognize that that could be their pelvic floor sitting in a contracted state with the inability or I want to say inability or awareness to relax. And so when we think of that contracted state with the inability to drop, recognizing that with that could come weakness as well. So there's a lot of different bubbles that we want to make sure that we are not missing when it comes to a tight pelvic floor.

THE ROLE OF THE PELVIC FLOOR The role of the pelvic floor is to contract. So if you can kind of conceptualize my shoulders as the pelvic floor, we want to close the holes and lift and we want to also be able to open the holes and drop. We want to be able to do this during a lot of different tasks and that can be toileting, intercourse, achieving an orgasm, lifting weights during daily tasks, so that's your laundry basket, the kiddos, or even your body weight,

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