How To Perform Kegel Exercises
How To Perform Kegel Exercises
How To Perform Kegel Exercises
EXERCISES
Published: January, 2011
To perform a Kegel, you first need to find your pelvic floor
muscles and then repeatedly contract and relax them.
Locate your pelvic muscles. Pretend you are trying to avoid
passing gas; in addition, you can pretend to tighten your vagina
around a tampon. Both actions involve the pelvic muscles. You
will feel a correct contraction more in the back than the front,
like you are pulling the anal area in or stopping gas from
escaping.
Choose your position. You can start by lying on your back until
you get the feel of contracting the pelvic floor muscles. Later,
you can practice while sitting and standing as well.
Practice contractions. Practice both short contractions and
releases (sometimes called "quick flicks") and longer ones
(gradually increasing the strength of the contraction and holding
it at your maximum for up to 10 seconds). Mastering long
contractions may take more practice. Consciously relax the
muscles between each repetition, and hold the relaxation phase
for the same amount of time as the contraction. Start by holding
each one for 3 to 5 seconds, resting the same number of seconds
between contractions. Build up to 10-second contractions, with
10 seconds of rest between contractions.
Keep other muscles relaxed. When doing pelvic floor
exercises, don't contract your abdominal, leg, or buttock muscles
or lift your pelvis. Place a hand gently on your belly to detect
unwanted abdominal action.
Repetitions. Try to do at least 30 to 40 Kegels every day. It is
more effective to spread the exercises throughout the day than
to do them all at once. One simple starting regimen is to do 10
before getting out of bed, 10 standing after lunch, 10 in the
evening while sitting watching TV, and another 10 before going
to sleep. You can do them at other times as well: in the car sitting
at a stoplight, waiting for an elevator, or waiting in a grocery
line.
Other times. You can practice using these exercises to control
urinary symptoms. If you have stress incontinence, tighten your
pelvic floor muscles just before lifting, coughing, laughing, or
whatever usually causes urine leakage. Do the same several
times when you have the urge to urinate and doubt you are going
to make it to the toilet. This should relax your bladder muscle so
you can walk to the toilet under control.
Be consistent. Practice consistently, using whatever schedule
works for you. It may take a few months for you to notice an
improvement in your symptoms.
Matthew Solan
Executive Editor, Harvard Men's Health Watch
STEP-BY-STEP GUIDE TO
PERFORMING KEGEL EXERCISES
Published: January, 2015
Doing Kegels right means find your pelvic floor muscles and
working them.
Kegel exercises won't help you look better, but they do
something just as important — strengthen the muscles that
support the bladder. Strong pelvic floor muscles can go a long
way toward warding off incontinence.
These exercises were developed in the late 1940s by Dr. Arnold
H. Kegel, an American gynecologist, as a nonsurgical way to
prevent women from leaking urine. They also work for men
plagued by incontinence.
Although the exercises themselves are simple, finding the right
muscles to exercises isn't. One-third or more of women and men
who do Kegels are actually working their abdominal, buttock, or
inner thigh muscles. They don't reap the benefits of the
exercises.
Practice contractions
Choose your position. Start by lying on your back until you get
the feel of contracting the pelvic floor muscles. When you have
the hang of it, practice while sitting and standing.
Contract and relax
Contract your pelvic floor muscles for 3 to 5 seconds.
Relax for 3 to 5 seconds.
Repeat the contract/relax cycle 10 times.
Keep other muscles relaxed. Don't contract your abdominal,
leg, or buttock muscles, or lift your pelvis. Place a hand gently
on your belly to detect unwanted abdominal action.
Extend the time. Gradually increase the length of contractions
and relaxations. Work your way up to 10-second contractions
and relaxations
Aim high. Try to do at least 30 to 40 Kegels every day.
Spreading them throughout the day is better than doing them all
at once. Since these are stealth exercises that no one notices but
you, try to sneak in a few when waiting at a stoplight, riding an
elevator, or standing in a grocery line.
Diversify. Practice short, 2 to 3 second contractions and
releases (sometimes called "quick flicks") as well as longer ones.
Kegels in an emergency
If you leak urine when you cough, sneeze, laugh, bend over, or
lift something heavy (stress incontinence), doing one or more
Kegels before a "trigger" may be enough to prevent any leakage.
If you have the urge to urinate and doubt you are going to make
it to the toilet, doing Kegels may get you safely to a restroom.