Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

General health

Mumsnet doesn't verify the qualifications of users. If you have medical concerns, please consult a healthcare professional.

Pt 9 (Oct13) Any old prolapse! Uterus/womb prolapse, rectocele, cystocele, enterocele, urethrocele, incontinence, pelvic floor, anterior and posterior repair, TVT etc

53 replies

rebelnotaslave · 10/09/2017 11:15

Welcome to thread 9 (again - see below) of a long-running series of posts from ladies suffering from pelvic prolapses to support each other through the process of diagnosis, repair and recovery.

With apologies for confusion in thread numbers - an earlier thread was called part 7 but it was actually the 6th thread.

Here are the previous threads:

Thread 1
Thread 2
Thread 3
Thread 4
Thread 5
Thread 6
Thread 7
Thread 8

Info from BBC Health

What is a pelvic prolapse?

As the muscles, ligaments and supporting tissues in the pelvis become weaker, they are less able to hold in the organs of the pelvis such as the womb (uterus) or bladder.

Gravity pulls these organs down and, in the more severe cases, may appear through the entrance to the vagina.

A variety of problems can occur, depending on where the weakness lies and which organs are able to descend, but in every case there is some degree of prolapse of the vaginal wall, which begins to invert (rather like a sock turning inside out).
Prolapse of the womb or uterus is the most common prolapse, affecting as many as one in eight older women to some degree
Prolapse of the bladder, known as a cystocele, is less common.
Prolapse of the urethra (the tube that carries urine out of the bladder) is known as a urethrocele.
Prolapse of the intestines is quite rare, and known as an enterocele or rectocele.

Symptoms

Symptoms depend on which tissues descend, and how severe the prolapse is.

They may include:
A sense of heaviness or pressure in the pelvis.
The appearance of a bulge of tissue in the genital area, which can be quite alarming, and is often red and sore.
Urinary problems, such as having to urinate more frequently, feeling the need urgently, being incontinent (losing control of the bladder) or, conversely, being unable to pass urine when you need to.
Pain in the pelvis or lower back.
Sexual problems, including pain and decreased libido.
Constipation.
Vaginal discharge or bleeding.

Treatment and recovery

Once a prolapse has developed, surgery to fix the affected organs is usually the only way to cure it effectively.

However, another option is to use a device known as a vaginal ring pessary. This is rather like a contraceptive diaphragm or cervical cap. It's made of silicone or latex, and placed in the vagina to push back the prolapsed organs and hold them in place. Many women happily manage their prolapse this way.

I really hope it is ok with the original group that I've done this!

OP posts:
ednclouda · 02/07/2019 19:10

OH Mumsnet you've saved me I thought I had a HERNIA now reading the symptoms it is a slight prolapse I thought I had been carrying too heavy a box round work and strained myself but its not that at all is it how is it that the lump bump goes away after a while ????

RosesM · 09/07/2019 13:26

Is this thread dead? Could really use a live birth injuries thread right now. I don’t have a prolapse though (at least not that is causing me problems) I have nerve damage... is there a more appropriate thread? Xx

FuriousR · 13/09/2019 07:29

I have a pp urethrocele, rectocele and slight uterine descent with suspected levator avulsion. Two boys, three and 7 months. Anyway, that's not my reason for posting. I just wanted to mention pessaries as, reading back, there's little mention of people receiving good advice from their doctors in this area. Yes, it would be nice not to be dependent on a piece of silicon wedged up my vagina and especially as I have a cube which is removed at night. However, I'm not a great surgical candidate, I have small children so couldn't have surgery now anyway as the lifting restrictions would be impossible and I want to be comfortable for my day to day life and active job. Pessaries may also prevent worsening and even be therapeutic in early pp period (research suggests this but evidence weak at present). Even if you're like me and have significant muscle damage which makes a ring pessary hard to use (they sit on the wings of the puborectalis muscle and public bone and drop to the entrance if there is damage - very common after forceps), there are lots of other types. Accepting this as an option is mentally challenging but it can provide a lot of relief (mental and physical) and the NHS seems truly useless at aiding with pessary selection despite promoting conservative management of prolapse given the short lifespan of many surgical repairs. Lots of ladies on this forum mention factors suggestive of connective tissue issues and this also seems overlooked - precipitous labour, hypermobile joints, varicose veins, hernias, severe spd, diastasis... Anyway, that's my contribution to the thread. If anyone has any questions about the cube pessary, feel free to ask. Have also just survived first pp period with perforated cube!

New posts on this thread. Refresh page