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Kegel Exercises
Life's events can weaken pelvic muscles. Pregnancy,
childbirth, and being overweight can do it. Luckily, when these
muscles get weak, you can help make them strong again.
Pelvic floor muscles are just like other muscles.
Exercise can make them stronger. Women with bladder control problems
can regain control through pelvic muscle exercises, also called
Kegel exercises.
Pelvic fitness in minutes a day
Exercising your pelvic floor muscles for just 5 minutes, three times
a day can make a big difference to your bladder control. Exercise
strengthens muscles that hold the bladder and many other organs
in place.
The part of your body including your hip bones
is the pelvic area. At the bottom of the pelvis, several
layers of muscle stretch between your legs. The muscles attach to
the front, back, and sides of the pelvis bone. Two pelvic muscles
do most of the work. The biggest one stretches like a hammock. The
other is shaped like a triangle. How do you exercise your pelvic
muscles?
Find the right muscles.
This is very important. Your doctor, nurse, or physical therapist
will help make sure you are doing the exercises the right way.
You should tighten the two major muscles that
stretch across your pelvic floor. They are the "hammock"
muscle and the "triangle" muscle. Here are three methods
to check for the correct muscles.
- Try to stop the flow of urine when you are
sitting on the toilet. If you can do it, you are using the right
muscles.
- Imagine that you are trying to stop passing
gas. Squeeze the muscles you would use. If you sense a "pulling"
feeling, those are the right muscles for pelvic exercises.
- Lie down and put your finger inside your
vagina. Squeeze as if you were trying to stop urine from coming
out. If you feel tightness on your finger, you are squeezing the
right pelvic muscle.
Do not squeeze other muscles at the same time.
Be careful not to tighten your stomach, legs, or other muscles.
Squeezing the wrong muscles can put more pressure on your bladder
control muscles. Just squeeze the pelvic muscle. Do not hold your
breath.
Repeat, but do not overdo it.
At first, find a quiet spot to practice-your bathroom or bedroom-so
you can concentrate. Lie on the floor. Pull in the pelvic muscles
and hold for a count of 3. Then relax for a count of 3. Work up
to 10 to 15 repeats each time you exercise.
Do your pelvic exercises at least three times
a day.
Every day, use three positions: lying, sitting, and standing. You
can exercise while lying on the floor, sitting at a desk, or standing
in the kitchen. Using all three positions makes the muscles strongest.
Be patient.
Do not give up. It's just 5 minutes, three times a day. You may
not feel your bladder control improve until after 3 to 6 weeks.
Still, most women do notice an improvement after a few weeks.
Exercise aids.
You can also exercise by using special weights or biofeedback. Ask
your health care team about these exercise aids.
"Hold the squeeze 'til after the sneeze"
You can protect your pelvic muscles from more
damage by bracing yourself:
Think ahead, just before sneezing, lifting, or
jumping. Sudden pressure from such actions can hurt those pelvic
muscles. Squeeze your pelvic muscles tightly and hold on until after
you sneeze, lift, or jump. After you train yourself to tighten the
pelvic muscles for these moments, you will have fewer accidents.
Points to Remember
- Weak pelvic muscles often cause bladder control
problems.
- Daily exercises can strengthen pelvic muscles.
- These exercises often improve bladder control.
- Ask your doctor or nurse. Are you squeezing
the right muscles?
- Tighten your pelvic muscles before sneezing,
lifting, or jumping. This can prevent pelvic muscle damage.
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