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Pain with Bowel Movement | Causes Symptoms and Treatments | Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine

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Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine™

Dr. Allyson Shrikhande, Chief Medical Officer at Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine, discusses pain with bowel movement.

Topics discussed include:

When pain with bowel movement can happen

Risk factors

Chronic constipation contributions

What to tell your provider

Ways pain can be relieved and treated

Dr. Shrikhande is the Chief Medical Officer of Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine. She distilled her global expertise into a minimally invasive, cuttingedge approach to the treatment of pelvic pain and pelvic floor muscle dysfunction. With an extensive background in mainstream clinical medicine, she also makes use of many alternatives, holistic and homeopathic approaches. She has published peerreviewed articles on the treatment of muscle pain in academic journals and works closely with renowned pelvic pain gynecologists and urologists.

At Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine, our pelvic pain specialists provide a functional, rehab approach to pelvic pain. When you visit one of our offices, you spend an hour with your doctor reviewing in detail your medical history and symptoms. Then, we perform an internal exam (no speculum) to evaluate your nerves and muscles. Together, we'll discuss an individual treatment plan that gets to the root cause of your pain and helps you to feel better. The best part: you can begin treatment the same day!

At PRM, our mission is to decrease the time patients are suffering from pelvic pain symptoms.

LEARN MORE: https://www.pelvicrehabilitation.com/

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Pain with bowel movement can happen when you have underlying pelvic floor hypertonia or pelvic floor muscle dysfunction. It can also happen when you have irritation of your pudendal nerves which often come with pelvic floor muscle dysfunction.

A risk factor for having a pain with bowel movements is constipation. So, chronic constipation can ultimately irritate the muscles and nerves of the pelvic floor and cause secondary pelvic floor muscle spasm. And that can spread to both the perineum and the testicles and the base of the penis in men, and for females, it can spread to the vaginal area and the bladder in both men and women, and ultimately lead to Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndrome.

It's important to address your constipation and let your healthcare professional know about it so that we can address it with both lifestyle and nutrition. Particularly with lifestyle, we have patients do the breathing exercises to help release the spasm in the pelvic floor muscles because often, even just the mechanical restriction of the pelvic floor muscles near the rectum can cause constipation. So it's important to release the tension in that mechanical restriction.

In addition, diet modification is important. We recommend supplements. Quite often, we use something called magnesium, which can gently promote normal bowel movements daily. Also, we recommend patients to prevent constipation to get the Squatty Potty. It's a simple maneuver that can really relax the muscles of the puborectalis and pubococcygeus and help the mechanical inhibition of bowel movements.

posted by ombi2g