What can you do to prevent gynecologic cancers?

Dr. YoungDr. Jennifer Young shared tips for reducing your risk for gynecologic cancers in the Moxie section of the Post and Courier.

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Women Leading Wellness: A Workshop Series by Women...for Women

Women Leading WellnessIn our family roles as wives, mothers, daughters, nutritional coaches, and caregivers, we women make countless healthcare decisions.  The groceries we buy and the food we prepare determine lifelong preferences for our families.  Our conversations with our children about drugs, alcohol, and sex may have lasting impact on their behavior.  And from well-baby checks for our infants to end-of-life care for our parents, we make countless choices about where our families receive medical treatment.  In fact, it is estimated that 80% of all health care decisions are made by women.

Women Leading Wellness is a workshop series sponsored by women faculty of MUSC in partnership with the Center for Women.  As women we understand the complexities, challenges, and joys of our multiple family roles.  The goal of the series is to engage with the women of the tri-county community to discuss the pressing concerns of women as healthcare leaders within their families and within society.  Each workshop will consist of a panel discussion with MUSC women and community women, with plenty of time allotted for free-ranging discussion with participants.

Please click on www.musc.edu/women for a complete listing of the workshops and for registration information.  Call your sister or best friend, and join us for evenings of discussion that will educate and inspire you in one of the most important roles of your life – a woman leading wellness for her family.

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Strengthen Your Pelvic Floor

In this post we provide an overview of the pelvic floor muscles and outline simple exercises from Pilates and yoga that can strengthen your pelvic floor. Strong pelvic floor muscles have many health benefits, one of the most beneficial results being the prevention of urinary incontinence.  Also, during pregnancy a strong pelvic floor makes delivery easier and reduces time to regaining elasticity in these muscles.  In addition, sexual function can benefit from pelvic floor strength throughout a woman’s life, including the enhancement of orgasm.


diagram of pelvic floorPelvic Floor Muscles

The pelvic floor is shaped like a bowl.  The skeletal muscles that make up the pelvic diaphragm are supported by the pubic bones.  The muscles are suspended from these bones by tendons like a parachute, giving the pelvic floor its dome shape.   The muscles wrap around the urethra (the opening to the bladder), the vagina, and the rectum.  Voluntary contraction and relaxation of the pelvic muscles controls urination and defecation.  Some forms of incontinence can occur because of the inability to control these muscles to prevent loss of urine or stool.  By strengthening the pelvic muscles through directed exercise, women can exert more control over voiding.  During intercourse, an orgasm results from clitoral stimulation that causes involuntary rhythmic contractions of the pelvic floor.  The areas that contract during orgasm include the outer third of the vagina, perineum, and anal sphincter, also referred to as the orgasmic platform.  Strengthening these muscles can lead to more intense orgasm. 

Kegel
yoga instructor, Gail CorvettePilates instructor, Terry Hamilton, RNGynecologist Dr. Arnold Kegel popularized the concept of pelvic floor exercise in order to decrease postpartum urinary incontinence. However, in Kegel’s experience, almost 1/3 of all women were unable to voluntarily contract this muscle with instruction only.  Commonly, women contract their abdominal or external perineal muscles rather than the internal pelvic floor.  In order to insure that the exercise is being done properly, a finger can be inserted into the vagina and the woman contracts the ring of muscles inside the vagina that surrounds the finger.  The pelvic muscles can also be engaged when stopping a bowel movement or stopping urination midstream.

A Home Kegel Excercise
1.         While urinating, start and stop the flow of urine until the bladder is empty.
2.         Lie on your back and bend your knees keeping both feet flat on the floor. Visualize your pelvic muscles and squeeze tension there.  Like riding up an elevator, start in “the basement” with no tension, then add tension slowly until reaching the “5th floor,” where you achieve the most tension possible. Then slowly release tension as you return to “the basement.”

How Pilates Helps
In Pilates, we refer to the pelvic floor as “the basement” of our abdominal wrap. Pilate’s exercises strengthen the pelvic floor, because these muscles are engaged at the beginning of every exercise.  To start, we cue the pelvic muscles, and then exhale the navel to the spine in order to pull the core up and in, down and together. When performing the exercises, keep all other muscles relaxed and don’t grip the buttocks.

How Yoga Helps
Mulabhanda is the yogic concept that engages the pelvic floor. Mula in Sanskrit means root, and bandha means lock. The action is similar to the Pilates focus as well as a Kegel exercise. In many yoga poses, mulabhanda is activated by drawing the pelvic floor muscles between the anus and genitals in and up, contracting the perineal muscles. Mulabhanda builds internal heat and balances the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems. When unlocked, prana (life force, energy) flows.

A Combined Yoga and Pilates Practice
Practice this 20-minute workout several times weekly to help build strength in your pelvic floor

1.         Begin in Sukhasana (easy pose) and engage mulabandha on an exhale. Contract and release 5-10 times.
2.         Open the feet to the width of the mat and sit into Malasana (squat), engaging and releasing mulabhanda 3-5 times. Your hands can be in Anjali Mudra (prayer pose) at the heart.
3.         Straighten legs (moving your feet as wide as your hips), lower head for Uttanasana (standing forward fold). Rotate the inner thighs back and apart then engage mulahandha.
4.         Alternate between squat and forward fold 5 times, exhaling when releasing into Uttanasana. Reengage and release mulabhandha with each Uttanasana and Malasana.
5.         Lie on back with knees either bent at table top or extended out, engage the pelvic floor, exhale navel to spine and curl head, neck and shoulders up to the shoulder blades while maintaining a neutral pelvis (not pressing lower back into mat). While pumping straight long arms up and down 8 inches inhale for 5 counts and exhale for 5 counts. 10 times. Sink navel deeper and squeeze pelvic floor and inner thighs.
6.         Lie flat on the floor with your arms extended to the ceiling and shoulders plugged into their sockets. Squeeze heels, inner thighs, engage pelvic floor, connect navel to spine. Inhale, curl up, and look at toes, arms extended over legs.  Exhale and continue to roll up articulating one vertebra at a time while engaging pelvic floor and pulling belly back, spine is "c" shape curve rounded, pause, inhale, re-engage connections and exhale entire time rolling down, imprinting one vertebra at a time.
7.         Lie on your back for Setu Bandhasana (bridge pose), engage mulabhanda when raising pelvis. Release the gluteus maximus muscles and focus on the pelvic floor muscles. Release the pelvis to the floor and stretch out your legs straight ahead into Paschimottansana (seated forward fold), engaging mulabhanda. Hold the lock for 3-5 breaths.
8.         Lie on your back in Savasana (corpse pose), engaging and releasing mulahanda and relaxing on the last release for 2-3 minutes.

Take a Class
You might want to join one of the many yoga and Pilates classes in the Charleston area and take advantage of the teacher’s expertise.  During class, pay particular attention to how you can engage the pelvic floor in each exercise. Both Gail and Terry (co-authors of this article) teach at the MUSC Wellness Center.

by:  Gweneth Lazenby MD, Terry Hamilton RN, and Gail Corvette

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Hit the Mat: Yoga during Pregnancy

Gail CorvetteYoga is a form of exercise that builds strength, flexibility and balance.  At MUSC Women’s Health, we encourage patients to obtain optimal health through physical and mental fitness. Yoga is the perfect practice to achieve these goals and can be safely practiced in pregnancy. Before any exercise, pregnant women should eat something, preferably carbohydrates.
 

Why practice yoga during pregnancy?

• Yoga can prepare you for delivery by increasing your body awareness and strengthening the pelvic floor muscles for delivery.
• Through yoga, you can develop or enhance a breathing practice to create a connection between your body, mind and developing baby. A strong breathing practice can assist you during labor.
• A meditation practice developed during yoga can help you remain calm and focused during pregnancy, delivery and parenthood.
 
When should I start?  How long can I continue?
 
If you can find a prenatal yoga class, that’s great; if not, learn about the position modifications and tell the teacher you are pregnant before class begins for additional assistance.  During the first trimester, avoid inversions (being upside down) such as shoulder stands or headstands.  Despite the ability to practice throughout pregnancy, some women opt to stop after their seventh month. 
Dr. Lazenby 
Does yoga strengthen my abs and pelvic floor for labor?
 
Absolutely!  In Anusara yoga, we talk about “drawing in your muscles.”  In pregnancy, you can imagine hugging your baby with your abdominal muscles during the entire class. When coming out of a pose, exhale and draw your belly into the spine.

There’s a yoga term called Mulabandha, which means drawing up the pelvic floor.  By practicing this pelvic locking action (similar to a kegel exercise), you’ll strengthen and bring awareness to your pelvic floor.
 
Are there relaxation poses I can do to help with pain and anxiety?
 
Viparita kirani (legs up the wall) with a blanket under your sacrum is a wonderful relaxation and inversion pose.

Use blankets and bolsters to get comfortable and support all parts of your body that need it. Then, try a variety of restorative poses. Drape your body over the bolster, placing it at the shoulder blades or middle back.  As long as it feels good and isn’t too much of a backbend, which can strain the abdominal muscles, these positions can be very relaxing.

Which poses should be avoided?
 
Generally, if a pose feels comfortable, try it.

There is concern about disastis recti, a weakening of the abdominal muscles in the midline, during pregnancy.  As a result, women may choose to avoid backbends in the third trimester. A modified backbend can be done using a bolster or blanket.

The best inversion to do in pregnancy, if you are practicing it, is Pincha Mayurasana (forearm stand); avoid Sirsasana (headstand).  As a modification after the first trimester, you can try Salamba Sarvangasana (shoulder stand) with a blanket under the shoulders to free your neck and walking up the wall to get into the pose instead of Halasana (plough).

Twists should be modified, always doing an open rather than closed twist.  Bharadvajasana (an open seated twist with legs tucked in) is a great one!

When in Savasana (corpses pose) during the late second and third trimesters, place a bolster under the right side to relief pressure from the vena cava.  After Savasana, roll over onto your left side which allows for better blood flow to the uterus and to avoid sciatica. (The teacher will most likely instruct the class to role to the right).
 
Are there any poses to try during pregnancy?

• Try a Surya Namaskar (sun salutation) modification, coming from Tadasana (mountain pose) through Campers’ pose (a squat, with your forearms just above the knees) to hands and knees rather than lying on your abdomen. You can also modify Bhujanghasana (cobra) with a blanket under the top of your thighs so your belly is elevated.
• Dhanurasana (bow pose) should be practiced on your side instead of on your belly in the late second and third trimester.
• During forward folds (standing and sitting), open your legs to make room for the baby before folding.
• Also try Ardha Chandrasana (half moon rising) with your back against the wall. You will feel weightless. Trikonasana (triangle) can also be done against the wall to assist with balance.

by:  Gweneth Lazenby, M.D. and Gail Corvette, MUSC Wellness Center

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Embarrassing but treatable

Dr. SwiftUrinary incontinence or leaking is a common condition in women. It affects upwards of 16 million Americans and is more common in our population than diabetes or hypertension. Despite this fact, it is often unrecognized or unappreciated as a treatable condition. There may be many reasons for this but one of them is the embarrassing nature of this disease and people’s reluctance to discuss it with their doctors.

Most women manage it by wearing absorbent products. This is why there is more grocery store shelf space for adult diapers and absorbent products than for infant care. Others isolate themselves socially for fear of an embarrassing accident. These women are often doing themselves a disservice as there are many therapies available with excellent results in restoring continence and confidence.

Some myths about incontinence:

• MYTH: It is an inevitable process of getting older. REALITY: There is no doubt that the incidence of incontinence increases with age but that doesn’t make it normal or inevitable. Women over the age of 50 respond to therapy just as well as younger women and get satisfactory relief in the vast majority of cases. Woman running to the nearest ladies room

• MYTH: Surgery is the only treatment option. REALITY: Surgery plays a role in some forms of incontinence but most incontinence is treated with either behavioral therapy, pharmacotherapy with medications or physical therapy with pelvic floor muscle strengthening.

• MYTH: Nothing works in treating incontinence, my friend had surgery and it didn’t work. REALITY: There are multiple therapies for treating all types of incontinence. Yes all therapies are not 100% effective, but do improve symptoms in over 90% of patients who seek care. Surgical cure rates for certain types of incontinence are around 90% and surgical failures are uncommon in properly selected patients.

What should I do if I am experiencing incontinence?

• Talk to your doctor (Family doctor, Internist or Gynecologist) by setting up a visit to discuss your incontinence problem. Don’t try to talk about it at a visit where you are also addressing other problems.
• If your doctor is not comfortable managing urinary incontinence ask for a referral to a local physician who can help you with your concerns.
• If you are concerned about surgery ask your doctor for non-surgical options (there are always non-surgical options)

What can I do myself to help with incontinence?

This will depend to some extent on what type of incontinence you are experiencing but here are a few suggestions:
• Avoid caffeinated substances.
• Avoid drinking large volumes of fluids (like some diets suggest)
• Kegel’s exercises are often recommended but research suggests they are difficult to master without the help of a physical therapist and biofeedback. However, there is new evidence that Pilates exercises can mimic some aspects of Kegel’s exercises and help strengthen the pelvic floor which can reduce incontinence episodes.
• Urinate on a regular schedule at least every 2.5 to 3 hours.

by:  Steve Swift, M.D.

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