Diagnosis
To figure out what's causing your chronic pelvic pain, your healthcare team asks you about your symptoms. You'll also answer questions about health conditions that you and your blood relatives, such as parents and siblings, have had over the years.
Your care team may ask you to keep a journal of your pain and other symptoms. This can help you describe the effect that the pain has on your daily life.
You also might need tests or exams such as:
- Pelvic exam. This can find symptoms of illnesses, unusual growths or tense pelvic floor muscles. Your healthcare professional checks for areas that feel tender. Speak up if you feel any pain during this exam, especially if it feels like the pain you've had lately. And if the exam makes you anxious, you can ask your care professional to stop at any time.
- Lab tests. These can check for illnesses such as chlamydia or gonorrhea. You also may need a blood test to measure your blood cells or a urine test to check for a urinary tract infection.
- Ultrasound. This test uses sound waves to make pictures of tissues, organs and other parts inside the body. It can help find growths or cysts in the ovaries, uterus or fallopian tubes.
- Other imaging tests. You might need computerized tomography (CT) scans or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). These imaging tests can help find growths or other unusual structures inside the body.
- Laparoscopy. During this surgery, a small cut is made in the stomach area. A thin tube with a small camera is placed through the cut. The camera lets your surgeon look at your pelvic organs and check for unusual tissues or infections. This procedure can help find and treat problems such as endometriosis and chronic pelvic inflammatory disease.
Finding the cause of chronic pelvic pain can take time. A clear reason for the pain may never be found. Talk openly with your healthcare team during this process. Work together to find a treatment plan that helps you live well with as little pain as possible.
Treatment
With chronic pelvic pain, the goal of treatment is to ease symptoms and make your quality of life better.
If your healthcare professional can find a specific cause, treatment focuses on that cause. If a cause can't be found, the focus of treatment is to manage pain and other symptoms. You may need more than one treatment.
Medications
Depending on the cause, certain medicines may be used to treat chronic pelvic pain, such as:
- Pain relievers. Medicines that you can buy without a prescription may ease some of your pain. These include aspirin, ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin IB, others) and acetaminophen (Tylenol, others). Sometimes you may need a strong prescription pain reliever. But pain medicine alone rarely gets rid of chronic pain.
- Hormone treatments. Some people find that the days when they have pelvic pain may overlap with a phase of their period. When this is the case, birth control pills or other hormonal medicines may help relieve pelvic pain.
- Antibiotics. If an illness caused by bacteria is the source of your pain, you may need antibiotics.
- Antidepressants. Some types of medicines that treat depression also can be helpful for chronic pain. These include tricyclic antidepressants, such as amitriptyline, nortriptyline (Pamelor) and others. They also include serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, such as duloxetine (Cymbalta) and venlafaxine (Effexor XR). They may help ease chronic pelvic pain even if you don't have depression.
- Muscle relaxers. Medicines such as cyclobenzaprine (Amrix) might help relax muscles linked with pelvic pain.
Other therapies
In addition to medicines, other treatments may help for chronic pelvic pain. These may include:
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Physical therapy. For some people, physical therapy can manage chronic pelvic pain. It can involve more than learning helpful stretches and relaxation techniques and getting a massage. It also can include procedures that treat pain.
For example, a physical therapist might find stiff areas in tissue that are linked with pelvic pain. The therapist can then stretch and put pressure on these areas to loosen them up. This is called myofascial release.
Sometimes, physical therapists target specific points of pain with a medical device called transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation. This sends low-voltage electric currents to nearby nerves.
Physical therapists also may use a psychology technique called biofeedback. This helps you become aware of areas where your muscles are tight, so you can learn to relax those areas.
Some people also get pain relief from a procedure called dry needling. The therapist places very thin needles into and around stiff, sensitive areas tied to pain called trigger points.
- Spinal cord stimulation. This also is called neuromodulation. The treatment involves implanting a device that blocks nerve pathways, so that the pain signal can't reach the brain. It may be helpful, depending on the cause of your pelvic pain.
- Trigger point injections. Trigger points are tight, sensitive spots on the body. Shots of numbing medicine may help block pain in these spots.
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Talk therapy. Some people with chronic pelvic pain also have a mental health condition, such as depression, anxiety or a personality disorder. Others have lasting trauma from sexual or emotional abuse. Talk therapy with a psychologist or a psychiatrist can help both the body and the mind. It can ease stress and help you learn ways to cope with pain.
One type of talk therapy that may help is called cognitive behavioral therapy. It involves learning how to be mindful of negative and faulty thoughts. Sex therapy also might help. A therapist teaches couples how to have sex without pain and may help ease pelvic pain.
Surgery
Your healthcare professional may suggest surgery to treat a problem that causes chronic pelvic pain. Surgeries include:
- Laparoscopy. If you have endometriosis, this type of surgery can treat or remove the tissue outside of the uterus that causes pain. During surgery, a slender viewing tool is placed through a small cut near the bellybutton. The painful tissue is removed through one or more other small cuts.
- Hysterectomy. In rare cases, you may need surgery to remove your uterus, called hysterectomy. You also may need to have one or both ovaries removed. This is called oophorectomy. These surgeries have key health consequences. Ask your healthcare professional to explain the benefits and risks in detail.
Pain rehabilitation programs
It may take a combination of treatment approaches before you find what works best for you. If appropriate, you might consider entering a pain rehabilitation program.
Lifestyle and home remedies
Long-term pain can have a major impact on your daily life. When you're in pain, you may have trouble sleeping, exercising or doing everyday tasks.
Long-term pain also can cause anxiety and stress. And these might make your pain worse.
Relaxation techniques such as meditation and deep breathing may help you get some relief. They can help release tension, ease pain, calm emotions and help you fall asleep.
Other lifestyle changes also may help ease chronic pelvic pain:
- Practice good posture.
- Lose extra weight. This may lower the risk of straining joints and muscles in the pelvis.
- Get regular exercise. Do an activity you enjoy, and pace yourself. Talk to your doctor first if working out causes pain.
Alternative medicine
Some research suggests that acupuncture may be helpful for some causes of pelvic pain.
During acupuncture treatment, tiny needles are placed into the skin at precise points. Pain relief may come from the release of endorphins, the body's natural painkillers. But that's only one theory about how acupuncture works. Acupuncture, in general, is a safe treatment.
Talk with your healthcare team before you try a complementary or alternative therapy.
Preparing for your appointment
You're likely to start by seeing your primary healthcare professional. Or you might see a gynecologist, a doctor trained to find and treat conditions that affect female reproductive health.
Depending on what might be causing your pain, you also may need to see one of these providers:
- A gastroenterologist, who helps people with digestive problems.
- A urogynecologist, who treats urinary and female reproductive system problems.
- A physiatrist or physical therapist, who helps people with muscle and skeletal pain.
What you can do
To prepare for your appointment:
- Make a list of your symptoms. Include any that don't seem related to the reason for your appointment.
- Make a note of key medical information. Include any major stresses or recent life changes.
- Make a list of your medicines. Write down any prescription and nonprescription medicines, vitamins, or other supplements you're taking. Include the amount you take, called the dose.
- Think about taking a family member or friend with you. It can be hard to recall all the information given during an appointment. Someone who goes with you may remember something that you missed or forgot.
- Prepare questions for your healthcare professional. This can help you make the most of your time together.
Some basic questions to ask include:
- What might be the cause of my symptoms?
- What tests might I need?
- If tests find the cause of my pain, what types of treatments might help me? If no clear cause is found, what treatments do you suggest?
- Are there any lifestyle changes I need to make?
- Should I see a specialist?
- Is there a generic alternative to the medicine you're prescribing?
- Are there any brochures or other printed material that I can have? What websites do you recommend?
Feel free to ask other questions during your appointment. And tell your healthcare professional if you don't understand something.
What to expect from your doctor
Your healthcare professional likely will ask you some questions. Be ready to answer questions about the pain itself, such as:
- When did the pain first start? Has it changed over time?
- How often do you feel the pain? Does it come in waves or is it constant?
- How bad is your pain, and how long does it last?
- Where do you feel the pain? Is it always in one place?
- How would you describe your pain?
You also can expect questions about things that seem to trigger or affect your pain, such as:
- Do you feel pain when you urinate or have a bowel movement?
- Does your period affect your pain?
- Does anything make your pain better or worse?
- Does your pain limit your ability to do everyday tasks or things you enjoy?
You'll be asked about your health history too. These questions might include:
- Have you ever had pelvic surgery?
- Have you ever been pregnant?
- Have you gotten treatment for a urinary tract or vaginal infection?
- Have you ever been touched against your will?
- What treatments for pelvic pain have you tried so far? How have they worked?
- Are you being treated, or have you recently been treated, for any other health concerns?
- Have you recently felt down, depressed or hopeless?