How Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy Helps Improve Bladder and Bowel Control explores targeted strategies for recovery. Discover new paths to mobility, healing, and personalized care.
Bladder and bowel control are often taken for granteduntil something goes wrong. Leaks, urgency, constipation, or incomplete emptying can disrupt daily life and affect everything from your confidence to your physical activity, work performance, and emotional well-being. These issues are more common than you might think and are not something you simply have to live with.
At YourFormSux (YFS), we offer pelvic floor physiotherapy designed to restore your control and comfort without surgery or medications. Whether youre dealing with incontinence, constipation, or pelvic organ dysfunction, pelvic physiotherapy is one of the most effective, non-invasive ways to regain proper bladder and bowel function.
Heres how it worksand why it should be a core part of your wellness or recovery plan.
The Pelvic Floor: Your Bodys Control Center
The pelvic floor is a group of muscles, fascia, and connective tissues that form a supportive sling at the base of the pelvis. These muscles are essential for:
Supporting pelvic organs (bladder, bowel, uterus)
Maintaining urinary and fecal continence
Enabling complete and efficient elimination
Coordinating with the diaphragm and core muscles
Regulating intra-abdominal pressure during daily activities
When these muscles are too weak, too tight, uncoordinated, or injured, your ability to control your bladder and bowel is compromised. Thats where pelvic floor physiotherapy comes in.
Common Signs of Pelvic Floor Dysfunction Affecting Bladder and Bowel Control
If you’re experiencing any of the following symptoms, your pelvic floor may need support:
Urinary incontinence (leaking with coughing, sneezing, or urgency)
Fecal incontinence (involuntary loss of gas or stool)
Urinary urgency or frequency (needing to go too often or too suddenly)
Constipation or incomplete evacuation
Painful urination or bowel movements
Straining to void or difficulty starting/stopping the flow
A feeling of pelvic heaviness or pressure
These issues can stem from childbirth, surgery, hormonal changes, chronic straining, trauma, aging, or inactivitybut regardless of the cause, physiotherapy offers a pathway to recovery.
How Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy Improves Bladder and Bowel Control
At YourFormSux, we focus on treating the root cause of dysfunction, not just the symptoms. Here’s how our approach works to improve both bladder and bowel function:
1. Comprehensive Functional Assessment
We begin with a detailed assessment to understand your unique situation. This may include:
Medical history and symptom review
Bladder and bowel habit questionnaires
Postural, core, and breathing evaluation
Optional internal exam (with consent) to assess pelvic floor strength, tone, coordination, and trigger points
Evaluation of muscle timing during coughing, bearing down, or lifting
This evaluation helps us identify whether your dysfunction stems from muscle weakness, tightness, coordination issues, or lifestyle factors.
2. Pelvic Floor Muscle Training
Depending on your needs, we guide you through progressive exercises to:
Strengthen weak pelvic floor muscles for better control
Coordinate muscle activation with core and breath for efficient function
Relax overactive muscles that contribute to incomplete voiding or urgency
Improve endurance to maintain control throughout the day
We dont just teach Kegelswe teach correct technique, appropriate timing, and integration into real-life movements like lifting, walking, or using the toilet.
3. Bladder Retraining and Urge Suppression
For those with urge incontinence or overactive bladder, we offer structured bladder retraining, which includes:
Gradually spacing out voiding intervals to increase bladder capacity
Teaching urge suppression techniques using breath and pelvic contractions
Identifying bladder irritants (e.g., caffeine, citrus, artificial sweeteners)
Educating you on healthy toileting posture and habits
This approach helps restore control and reduce the anxiety or urgency associated with bladder symptoms.
4. Bowel Health Support and Constipation Management
Constipation and bowel dysfunction are often linked to overactive pelvic floor muscles, poor toileting mechanics, or lack of muscle coordination. We help you:
Release tension in the pelvic floor and abdominal wall
Learn proper toileting posture (e.g., using a footstool, leaning forward)
Coordinate breath, abdominal pressure, and pelvic floor relaxation for smooth evacuation
Manage lifestyle factors that affect digestion and stool consistency
With the right strategies, many clients experience significant relief from straining, bloating, and incomplete emptying.
5. Manual Therapy for Muscle and Nerve Dysfunction
When pelvic floor muscles are tight or guarded, manual therapy can reduce pain and restore normal function. Depending on your condition, we may use:
External and internal soft tissue release
Scar tissue mobilization (after surgery, episiotomy, or tearing)
Nerve desensitization techniques for pudendal neuralgia or referred pain
Myofascial release for tension in the hips, glutes, abdomen, or thighs
Manual therapy helps break chronic tension cycles and improves your ability to fully contract and relax the pelvic flooressential for bladder and bowel regulation.
6. Core, Posture, and Breath Integration
Bladder and bowel control depend on effective pressure management. That means your diaphragm, core, and pelvic floor must work together smoothly. We train you to:
Use diaphragmatic breathing to regulate intra-abdominal pressure
Avoid over-bracing or straining the abdominal muscles
Align the spine and pelvis to support optimal pelvic floor activation
Use movement strategies that support continence and prevent leaks
This whole-body coordination supports sustainable pelvic health and reduces the likelihood of symptoms returning.
Who Can Benefit from Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy?
Pelvic floor physiotherapy can help people at all stages of life who experience:
Postpartum bladder or bowel issues
Incontinence after pelvic surgery or menopause
Functional constipation or painful bowel movements
Overactive bladder or irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)
Diastasis recti or core weakness contributing to pressure imbalances
Any changes in toileting habits that affect quality of life
Even if your symptoms seem mild or have been present for years, improvement is possible.
Why Choose YourFormSux?
At YourFormSux, we offer Torontos most personalized and empowering pelvic health physiotherapy. We are:
Experienced in treating complex bladder and bowel issues with compassion
Trauma-informed and respectful, always working at your pace
Focused on whole-body recovery, not just symptom control
Committed to long-term wellness and education, so you can stay strong and confident
We dont just treat your symptomswe help you rebuild trust in your body.





