Addressing Pelvic Floor Dysfunction in Men: What’s Fact and What’s Fiction?

Addressing Pelvic Floor Dysfunction in Men reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.

When most people think of pelvic floor dysfunction, they assume it’s a “women’s issue.” But the reality is that men have pelvic floors too, and they’re just as vulnerable to dysfunction—especially when it goes undiagnosed or ignored due to stigma and misinformation. Pelvic floor issues in men can cause pain, incontinence, sexual dysfunction, and core instability, yet myths around this topic continue to prevent men from getting the help they need.

At YourFormSux, we’re committed to raising awareness that pelvic floor therapy isn’t gendered—it’s an essential part of musculoskeletal and whole-body health. This blog breaks down common myths about male pelvic floor dysfunction, shares the facts, and highlights how physiotherapy can restore confidence, control, and comfort.

Fiction: “Pelvic floor dysfunction only affects women.”

Fact: Men have a pelvic floor too. It supports the bladder, rectum, prostate, and sexual function—just like in women. When these muscles become weak, tight, or uncoordinated, it can lead to a variety of uncomfortable or distressing symptoms.

Male pelvic floor dysfunction can include:

Urinary urgency or leakage

Difficulty starting or stopping the urine stream

Painful ejaculation or erectile dysfunction

Constipation or rectal pressure

Pelvic, groin, or tailbone pain

Sensation of incomplete bowel or bladder emptying

These issues aren’t “rare”—they’re just rarely talked about.

Fiction: “Kegels are only for women.”

Fact: Kegels are simply pelvic floor contractions—and men can benefit from them too. But just like women, not all men should jump into doing them without assessment. If the pelvic floor is overactive or spasming, strengthening exercises like Kegels can worsen the problem.

In male physiotherapy, we focus on:

Assessing whether the pelvic floor is weak or tight

Teaching relaxation before introducing strengthening

Coordinating the pelvic floor with breath, core, and posture

Functional movement to retrain daily mechanics

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Fiction: “Pelvic pain in men must be a prostate problem.”

Fact: While the prostate can be involved in some urological issues, many cases of chronic pelvic pain in men have nothing to do with infection or prostate enlargement. Instead, the pain is often musculoskeletal—stemming from tight or irritated pelvic floor muscles, especially after stress, trauma, or prolonged sitting.

Conditions like:

Chronic Prostatitis / Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndrome (CP/CPPS)

Pudendal neuralgia

Pelvic muscle spasms

Post-vasectomy pelvic pain

Tailbone pain (coccygodynia)

are frequently rooted in pelvic floor dysfunction—not inflammation.

What helps: Myofascial release, breath training, and neuromuscular retraining from a pelvic health physiotherapist.

Fiction: “There’s nothing you can do for post-prostatectomy leakage.”

Fact: Many men experience urinary incontinence after prostate surgery. But leakage isn’t inevitable—or irreversible. Pelvic floor physiotherapy has been shown to improve bladder control, speed up post-surgical recovery, and reduce reliance on pads or medications.

Physiotherapy after prostate surgery includes:

Gentle pelvic floor muscle activation techniques

Bladder retraining for timing and urge control

Real-time feedback on core-pelvic coordination

Breathing and relaxation for improved control

With consistent care, many men regain significant function within months of surgery.

Fiction: “Men don’t need pelvic physiotherapy unless they’re older.”

Fact: Pelvic floor issues can affect men of all ages. Athletes, cyclists, lifters, office workers, and even young men with high stress levels may develop dysfunction due to overuse, poor posture, breathing habits, or core imbalance.

Early warning signs include:

Tight hips and lower back pain

Groin discomfort after workouts

Urinary urgency under stress

Trouble with core engagement

Sexual performance anxiety related to physical symptoms

These signs shouldn’t be dismissed as “just stress.” They are physical signals that the pelvic floor needs attention.

What Male Pelvic Floor Therapy Looks Like

At YourFormSux, pelvic floor physiotherapy for men is private, respectful, and rooted in science. No guesswork. No discomfort. Just clear evaluation and practical strategies that restore function.

A typical session may include:

Full-body postural and breathing assessment

External pelvic floor evaluation (internal exams are rare and optional)

Movement and mobility checks

Myofascial or trigger point therapy

Education on bladder, bowel, and sexual health mechanics

Breathing drills and exercise progression

When to See a Pelvic Floor Physiotherapist

Men should seek pelvic floor therapy if they experience:

Leaking urine or urgency

Erectile dysfunction not explained by vascular issues

Pelvic or perineal pain with sitting

Constipation or incomplete evacuation

Painful ejaculation

Recovery needs after prostate surgery

Ongoing core weakness or back pain

Pelvic dysfunction is treatable, but it often goes missed because it’s mistaken for unrelated problems—or ignored due to stigma.

Final Thoughts: Pelvic Health Is Not Just a Women’s Issue

It’s time to erase the idea that pelvic floor therapy is only for women. Men benefit equally from proper evaluation, education, and treatment—especially when their pain, dysfunction, or discomfort has gone unresolved for too long.

At YourFormSux, we support all genders in addressing pelvic floor dysfunction through personalized physiotherapy that restores control, confidence, and comfort.

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