Other Treatment
Female pelvic
pain treatment can be enhanced with counseling, mental skills training,
relaxation, and physical therapy treatment.
Other Treatment Choices
Counseling and mental skills
training help you learn the mental and emotional tools for managing
chronic pain and the stress that makes it worse. Commonly recommended
approaches include:
- Cognitive-behavioral therapy focused on
changing the way you think about and mentally manage pain. This approach is a
proven chronic pain treatment.7 See a psychologist,
licensed counselor, or clinical social worker who specializes in pain
management skills.
- Biofeedback, which is the conscious
control of body function that is normally unconsciously
controlled.
- Interpersonal
counseling, focused on best managing your life events, stressors, and
relationships.
Physical therapy can help you
learn specific exercises to stretch and strengthen certain muscle groups.
Physical therapy helps you to improve posture, gait,
and muscle tone.
Alternative pain
treatments for chronic female pelvic pain are not well studied but are
considered helpful for managing stress and building mental mastery over pain.
Acupuncture and
transcutaneous nerve stimulation (TENS) have shown
some success in relieving painful menstrual periods. Acupuncture has also been
used as a treatment for nonmenstrual chronic pelvic pain but is not yet well
studied.1
Other low-risk alternative pain
treatments that many people use to help manage pain include:
What To Think About
Chronic pelvic pain takes time to
develop and can take a long time to treat. Take charge of how you cope with
pain by using one or more of the treatment choices above. Combine your
treatment with the practices you prefer for keeping a positive state of mind.
For more information, see the topic
Stress Management.