If you have an incompetent pelvic floor (either too tight * or * too long and weak to work well) to boot, you're almost guaranteed to develop
pelvic organ prolapse at some point in your life.
I had
a pelvic organ prolapse at 4.5 months postpartum.
Not exact matches
Professor Sheila MacNeil, Professor of Tissue Engineering in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering
at the University of Sheffield said: «For many years now, surgeons have been treating the problems of urinary stress incontinence and
pelvic organ prolapse using the only synthetic material they had to hand — polypropylene.
When we do these activities without first strengthening our
pelvic floor muscles and our abdominal muscles we are
at risk of
prolapsing our
pelvic organs.
You are
at risk for low back strain,
prolapsing of your
pelvic organs (falling out of your vagina) and diastasis recti - a separation of your rectus abdominus muscle, known as the six - pack muscle.