Reviewed by Dr Jessica Gunawan and Physician Lim Sock Ling on July 14, 2022
How Do Kegel Exercises Support Women’s Health?
Published | 7 min read
Childbirth puts a lot of strain on women. Doing Kegel exercises is a great way to help get your body back, alleviating conditions such as urinary incontinence and lackluster orgasms. Here's what you need to know.
Kegel
Benefits of Kegel exercises include better bladder control, joint mobility, and even stronger orgasms. Best of all, they can be done in the comfort and privacy of your own home.
Here’s what you need to know about Kegel exercises, including why you may need them and how to do them.
What Are Kegel Exercises?
Kegel exercises are also known as pelvic floor exercises. They are targeted movements designed to help strengthen and relax the muscles that form part of the pelvic floor. This includes the uterus, bladder, and bowel.
As a woman matures into her reproductive years and beyond, pelvic floor muscle health is integral to her overall well-being.
For one, urinary incontinence, a result of weak pelvic floor muscles, affects almost 22% of women worldwide. Among pregnant women, the number can be as high as 54%.
Why Do Women Need Them?
Although
One of the biggest risks of not maintaining pelvic floor health is pelvic organ prolapse where the uterus, bladder, and bowel sag down towards the vagina.
Your muscles weaken with age. In addition, pregnancy and vaginal childbirth put tremendous strain on this part of the body, straining and exhausting the muscles.
Being overweight is also a risk factor. Other reasons why you may need Kegel exercises include:
- Surgery, such as a C-section
- Genetics
- Certain high-impact exercises (such as jumping, running, and heavy weightlifting)
- The natural aging process (loss of estrogen weakens pelvic floor muscles)
- Too many bouts of laughing, coughing or sneezing heavily
While incontinence is the main physical ailment that comes with this condition, having strong pelvic floor muscles can also mean a healthier and more vibrant sex life.
Many of the same muscles targeted by Kegel exercises are also involved when you orgasm. Moreover, not only do the exercises target these muscles, but Kegel exercises for women also improve mobility around joints in areas involving multiple joint groups.
It also improves musculoskeletal health and helps prevent conditions such as osteoporosis that disproportionately affect women.
How To Perform Kegel Exercises
Named after the American gynecologist who first defined pelvic floor muscle exercise, all Kegel exercises share the lift-hold-release set of voluntary muscle work.
To properly engage in Kegel exercises, take note of the following steps that detail the philosophy behind doing these exercises:
1. Identify your pelvic floor muscles
You can locate these muscles by noticing which muscles you engage to stop urinating mid-stream. Some women may have issues locating and feeling these muscles.
There are specialist doctors that can work with you using biofeedback technology that involves inserting a probe into the vagina. It can essentially “teach” you to correctly engage the muscles.
You should also know that
Work with a professional to determine the state of your pelvic floor muscles.
2. Lift, hold, and release
Focus on slowly practicing lifting, holding, or squeezing, then releasing the pelvic floor muscles. This is essentially what Kegel exercises are.
On your first day, you may want to start with a shorter duration of lifting then holding for five seconds, and then releasing and resting for about five seconds.
Repeat and do just five repetitions of these. Over time, your goal is to have a couple of sessions of ten full repetitions per day.
3. Try similar exercises
“Exercises that target the pelvic floor muscles and have a clench-and-release work the same way as Kegel exercises, “says Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)
“These include holding your urine as the simplest example. Do note that it is not advisable to do so as incomplete emptying of your bladder can lead to urinary tract infection. Yoga and pilates often work the pelvic floor muscles with a similar effect as Kegel exercises. Sidestep, child’s pose and clamshell exercises go through a hip abduction motion like a Kegel exercise,” she elaborates.
4. Don’t forget to breathe
“When doing
With smooth Qi circulation, the Blood flow is regulated, hence reducing Stagnation, and improving symptoms such as pain, menstruation discomforts, and helping to lift mood,” Physician Lim further shares.
“When ready and calm, lie on your back, legs out straight, and try to smoothly draw your lower belly muscles in for a count of five, then slowly release. Repeat ten times. This helps to promote intestinal movements and digestion as the action also awakens the organs within,” she suggests.
How Can Acupuncture Support Pelvic Floor Health?
Physician Lim shares that there is an association between the muscles and the Spleen from a TCM point of view. A healthy relationship between the Spleen organ system and our muscles bolsters a well-functioning digestive system that ensures nutrients are absorbed properly.
“Acupuncture and herbs can help to strengthen and lift Qi to enhance the benefits of Kegel exercises. They aim to strengthen the pelvic floor and hold the womb and internal organs in place. This also improves urinary incontinence, reduces the occurrence of accidental urine leakage when sneezing, and helps a person feel more energized in general,” she explains further.
In one study, patients with first postpartum female pelvic floor dysfunction received acupuncture treatment. They showed a decrease in the bladder neck descent, anal levator muscle area, and anal levator muscle hole diameter. In addition to acupuncture, moxibustion can warm the meridians to aid in the effect of uplifting the patient under treatment.
Acupoints that enhance the benefits of Kegel exercises
The acupoints that can be used to enhance the benefits of Kegel exercises for women are:
- Qi Hai (CV6)
Guan Yuan (CV4)
- Zhong Ji (CV3)
- Shui Dao (ST28)
- San Yin Jiao (SP6)
- Shen Shu (UB23)
- Ci Liao (BL32)
- Pang Guang Shu (BL28)
“However, please note that acupuncture for this purpose is not allowed for pregnant women. Most of the acupoints are either on the abdomen or lower back, which are contraindicated for pregnant women. In addition, a person who feels weak should not undergo acupuncture treatment. They should strengthen their body constitution via herbal medication first,” Physician Lim cautions.
TCM Herbal Formulations and Kegel Exercises for Women
TCM herbs can also be a great complement to Kegel exercises to enhance their benefits. In a two-year study published by the National Center for Biotechnology Information of 186 subjects with postpartum pelvic floor dysfunction, the addition of Bu Zhong Yi Qi to a treatment regimen of Kegel exercises significantly improved the quality of sexual life for these women.
Other herbs that help with strengthening the body include health supplements such as the essence of chicken with American ginseng, cordyceps, and Huai Shan. “Please note that people with hypertension should be cautious when consuming herbs with uplifting effects, such Bu Zhong Yi Qi soup, which can cause a rise in blood pressure,” Physician Lim cautions.
Kegel exercises for women are important not just to prevent and address incontinence, but also to ensure a healthy sex life while preventing painful conditions that can come with old age. Go ahead, start on your
References
- PLoS One. 2020. Urinary incontinence and its association with pelvic floor muscle exercise among pregnant women attending a primary care clinic in Selangor, Malaysia.
- Cleveland Clinic. 2020. Kegel Exercises (Pelvic Floor Exercises).
- National Association for Continence. Kegel Exercises – A Step by Step Guide.
- Medicine. 2021. Evaluation of acupuncture treatments of postpartum female pelvic floor dysfunction by four-dimensional transperineal pelvic floor ultrasound.
- Sexual Health. 2018. Beneficial effects of pelvic floor muscle exercises on sexual function among postmenopausal women: a randomised clinical trial.
- China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica. 2018. Effect of modified Buzhong Yiqi decoction combined with pelvic floor muscle exercise-biofeedback-electrical stimulation on early stage postpartum pelvic floor dysfunction.
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