The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTION

Pelvic floor problems split two ways, too weak or too tight, and the fix is opposite for each.

Right now, gently squeeze your pelvic floor (as if stopping the flow of urine), then fully let it go and relax it. If squeezing is easy but fully relaxing is the hard part, your floor is likely too tight — and Kegels are the wrong move. See a pelvic-health physical therapist before starting any squeezing program.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Physio Engine · The Verdict

Pelvic Floor Dysfunction

It is not one problem. The pelvic floor is a muscle group that can be too weak, too tight, or badly coordinated — and the right fix is completely different for each.

CONVICTION: MODERATE

Return to Training

For lifters and athletes, these are the checkpoints before pushing impact and load again.

⚠ Red Flags — Get Seen Now

Most pelvic floor symptoms are not dangerous. These are the exceptions. If any apply, this is not an exercise problem.

Cinematic anatomical illustration of the pelvis and lower spine
  • Numbness around the saddle/groin area, or new weakness or numbness in BOTH legs — possible cauda equina, a spinal emergency.
  • Sudden inability to pass urine (acute retention), or rapidly worsening neurological problems.
  • A vaginal/pelvic bulge or "something coming down," blood in the urine, or fever with pelvic symptoms.

→ Saddle numbness + both legs affected + can't urinate = go to the ER. Bulge, blood, or fever = see a doctor urgently. Everything else = read on.

Right now: gently squeeze your pelvic floor like you're stopping the flow of urine, then fully let it go and relax it. If squeezing is easy but fully relaxing is the hard part, your floor is likely too tight.

A tight floor gets worse with Kegels. If that's you, see a pelvic-health physical therapist before starting any squeezing program — strengthening the wrong type makes the pain worse.

Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.

What Works MODERATE

The active ingredient is a correctly-matched, well-taught, adhered-to program. Match the type first, then load.

Cinematic anatomical illustration of pelvic and core musculature

Tier 1 — Strong Evidence HIGH

Phenotype-matched pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT). For the weak/leaking type, supervised, technique-confirmed strengthening is the reference first-line treatment for stress incontinence in women (Cochrane, Dumoulin/Hay-Smith 2015, ~1,300 women). The single highest-leverage act is matching the type before you load.

Exercise Prescription (weak / leaking type):
• Find it: gently lift and squeeze as if stopping urine and holding back wind — then fully let go. Confirm BOTH phases first.
• Short holds: squeeze, hold ~3–5 sec, fully relax. Build toward 8–10 reps, daily.
• Quick flicks: fast squeeze-and-release, 8–10 reps, daily (for the "cough" leaks).
• Pain guide: effort only, never pain, no breath-holding or bearing down. Judge progress at 8–12 weeks.
See Tier 2 & Tier 3 (down-training, post-surgery, adjuncts)

Tier 2 — Moderate Evidence MODERATE

Down-training for the tight/painful type. Relaxation, breathing, and manual therapy first-line for at least 8–12 weeks before escalating (Torosis 2024 high-tone algorithm; vulvodynia rehab, Berghmans-style review 2024). NOT strengthening.

Preoperative PFMT for men facing prostate surgery hastens continence recovery (Chang 2016). The main pelvic-floor pathway that lands in a male caseload.

Coordination biofeedback for straining / incomplete emptying (dyssynergia) — the right tool for the timing problem specifically (Woodward 2008).

Tier 3 — Adjuncts / Emerging ADJUNCT

Electrical stimulation, magnetic stimulation (HIFEM chairs), telerehab and app-based delivery. Useful for access or for people who can't isolate a contraction — but they're teaching and access aids, not upgrades on a well-taught contraction (not superior to active PFMT, multiple reviews).

What Doesn't Work

  • Reflexive Kegels for everyone. Strengthening a tight, painful floor makes it worse. The most common avoidable error.
  • Device tech sold as a cure. Biofeedback, e-stim, and magnetic chairs are adjuncts, not a mechanism that beats supervised training.
  • "Do your Kegels" handouts with no check that you can actually produce — and relax — the contraction.
  • Chasing strength on a probe instead of the symptoms that matter: leaking, pain, and emptying.

Conviction

MODERATE

The framework is solid; the precise numbers aren't. PFMT as first-line for stress incontinence is HIGH (Cochrane). Phenotype-before-you-load is HIGH (mechanism + consensus). Adjuncts-not-upgrades is MODERATE. Exact sets/reps/dosing and a validated bedside test are not established.

What would change this

A large (300+), blinded trial that sorts people by pelvic-floor type at the start and compares matched therapy vs generic Kegels vs a device, with real outcomes (leaking, pain, emptying) at 12 months — would confirm or downgrade the "match the type" thesis and could finally pin down dosing.

Why "no validated bedside test"?

No pelvic-floor special test in the reviewed evidence has published sensitivity/specificity numbers. Diagnosis is clinical pattern recognition plus imaging only when a structural or defecatory question needs it.

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The Full Picture — Anatomy, Diagnosis & Evidence

What's Actually Going On

The pelvic floor is a sling of skeletal muscle (mainly levator ani) strung between your pubic bone, the sides of the pelvis, and the tailbone. It does three jobs: it closes off the bladder and bowel openings (continence), it holds the pelvic organs up against the pressure of coughing, lifting, and standing (anti-prolapse), and it works together with your deep abdominal muscles and diaphragm as part of your core pressure system.

Cinematic anatomical illustration of the pelvic floor musculature

It fails in three patterns: too weak (you leak), too tight (it hurts, sex is painful, you can't fully empty), or badly coordinated (it fires at the wrong time — e.g., clenching when it should relax during a bowel movement). Same muscle group, opposite problems, opposite fixes.

How to Identify It

There's no validated bedside special test with reliable accuracy numbers — diagnosis is pattern recognition. The key checks:

  • Can the floor contract AND fully relax on cue? Sn/Sp: not established The relax-on-cue answer is the single best discriminator.
  • Cough stress test — does leakage happen with effort? Sn/Sp: not established Points to the weak/stress type.
  • Bear-down pattern — does it relax, or paradoxically clench? Sn/Sp: not established Clenching points to the coordination type.
Cinematic anatomical illustration of pelvic and core assessment regions

Imaging is for specific questions only: MR defecography for obstructed emptying, ultrasound or MRI for structural injury after childbirth (levator avulsion). It is not needed for typical leaking. Internal (intravaginal/intrarectal) assessment is a specialised, training-and-consent-gated skill — a general MSK clinician screens and refers.

The Debate

"Kegels are the treatment" vs "It depends on the type"

The strong evidence for pelvic floor strengthening comes almost entirely from stress incontinence (the weak type). That gets wrongly generalised to ALL pelvic floor problems — including the tight, painful type, where strengthening is the opposite of what's needed (Torosis 2024; vulvodynia rehab 2024).

Current best practice: figure out the type first. Strengthen the weak floor; down-train the tight one.

"Biofeedback and machines are better" vs "They're just teaching aids"

Biofeedback adds little over a well-taught contraction (Herderschee-style review 2012); electrical and magnetic stimulation are not superior to active training. Much of their apparent benefit in trials is really the benefit of being taught the contraction at all.

Current best practice: active, supervised training is the reference. Use the tech as an aid for people who can't isolate or can't access supervision.

Honest Limitations

One label, opposite problems

"Pelvic floor dysfunction" pools weak floors and tight floors together. Averaged study results hide how much matching the type matters — and how much the wrong match harms.

Teaching is the hidden active ingredient

A supervised, technique-confirmed program is a world apart from a "do your Kegels" handout. A lot of the gap between trial results and real life is simply whether the contraction was ever taught properly.

Strength on a probe isn't the goal

Many studies measure muscle strength on a device instead of the outcomes patients care about — leaking, pain, and emptying. Track the symptoms, not the surrogate.

The Nuance

Cinematic anatomical illustration of pelvic differential anatomy

The evidence base is overwhelmingly female and urogynaecological. The directly relevant male data sits almost entirely in recovery of continence after prostate surgery, where starting pelvic floor training before the operation helps. And pelvic floor dysfunction is common, frequently hidden, and shows up inside ordinary MSK caseloads — low back pain, hip pain, female athletes (roughly 3× the incontinence risk of sedentary women), and lifters who hold their breath and brace. The clinician's job is to recognise it, screen it, match the type, and refer the red flags and the cases that don't settle.

Sources

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