Health & Medical STDs Sexual Health & Reproduction

About Kegel Exercises for Women

    Definition

    • Kegel exercises are conditioning moves developed to help women with vaginal or urinary prolapse, or incontinence. You can locate these muscles by squeezing your pelvic muscles to stop the flow during urination. The pelvic muscles used are called the pubococcygeal muscles, or PC muscles.
      The exercises are simple repetitions and variations of the squeezing method. Experts recommend contracting and relaxing the PC muscles up to 200 times a day.

    Benefits of Kegel Exercises

    • Benefits include strengthening the birth canal for easier labor, regaining vaginal tone after giving birth, improving urinary or bowel incontinence, treating prostate pain or swelling from prostasis, and aiding sexual intercourse.

    History

    • They were developed by Dr. Arnold Kegel in 1946. Dr. Kegel identified the stress on these muscles as being a cause of his patients' vaginal and uterinal prolapse, or weakening of these organs.

    Exercises

    • Squeeze the PCs 10 times, then hold on the last squeeze while counting to 8. Then release for a count of 8 and repeat.
      The "elevator Kegel" is when you try squeezing slowly at the bottom of the PCs and move up, tightening as you go. Then hold for a few seconds and release slowly in reverse. This method may take some practice.

    Pregnancy

    • Kegels can help women who want to have natural childbirth and/or avoid vaginal tears or an episiotomy.

Related posts "Health & Medical : STDs Sexual Health & Reproduction"

New HIV Clue

STDs

Cervical Cancer & Exercise

STDs

Study: PSA Test Level for Prostate Cancer Too High

STDs

HIV Screening Tests for Diagnosis and Treatment

STDs

Dating For HIV Positive People

STDs

Q and A - How Can You Tell If Someone Has Herpes?

STDs

Prostate Cancer Screening (PDQ®): Screening - Patient Information [NCI]-Changes to This Summary (07

STDs

Sex Selection for Non-medical Reasons

STDs

How to Relieve Herpes Symptoms the Priceless Way!

STDs

Leave a Comment