What is men's pelvic health?
Pelvic floor PT is not only for women. Men have a pelvic floor too, and when it is too tight, too weak, or losing its coordination, the symptoms can be confusing, hard to discuss, and often go undiagnosed for years.
In plain language.
Pelvic floor PT is not only for women. Men have a pelvic floor too, and when it is too tight, too weak, or losing its coordination, the symptoms can be confusing, hard to discuss, and often go undiagnosed for years.
Most male patients come to us after seeing urologists, primary care, and sometimes pain specialists who could not find a structural cause. The cause is often the pelvic floor itself.
How it shows up.
Common reasons men come in:
- Chronic pelvic pain that has been called "prostatitis" but has no infection
- Post-prostatectomy continence work
- Pain with cycling, with prolonged sitting, or with sex
- Pudendal-pattern pain along the perineum and into the genitals
- Urinary frequency or urgency without infection
- Erectile dysfunction with a musculoskeletal component
What makes our treatment different.
We see men. Many male patients arrive after urology, primary care, and pain specialists could not find a structural cause. The cause is often the pelvic floor itself.
Same assessment-driven approach, adapted to male anatomy. External and internal work as clinically indicated, internal exam never required. We work on the pelvic floor, the deep hip rotators, and the lower abdominal wall.
Sixty minutes in a private room with the same therapist. Men's pelvic health is hard enough to discuss the first time. You should not have to re-explain it to a new clinician every visit.
Begin with a closer look.
Book a 60-minute evaluation, or call to talk through where you are first.