Dear Runners: Here's Why You Need To Take Special Care of Your Pelvic Floor
When a runner comes to us and tell us that they are leaking urine, we quickly explain that urinary incontinence is the body’s way of telling us that there is an underlying dysfunction. Somewhere, with impact, the muscles, connective tissue, and other mechanisms such as breath, are not working the way they should to maintain continence. Then we go on a fun hunt for clues together!
Questions We Ask
When do you start leaking? Is it right away or when you are a certain miles in? (That could indicate that muscular fatigue in certain groups kicks in at that point.) How much is the leaking, is it always present or only sometimes (like with a mile time trial)? Does your choice of shoes or the type of surface you are running on change things? These are some examples of questions we delve into, as well as a full evaluation of muscle groups, strength, vertical versus horizontal jumps, running gait analysis, core and breath dynamics, and so much more.
Running: A Complex Series of Biomechanics
Running, like any movement, is a complex series of biomechanics. When the foot hits the ground (ground strike), the many bones of the foot adapt to the surface and react to the force of impact (referred to as ground reaction force), sending that force to be dispersed and diluted through the body. This explains why certain gait mechanics, like heel strike, can cause the force to go to the knee, causing knee pain. The knee itself is one of the body’s greatest levers, with the kneecap (patella) proving a lever arm for the quads muscles, allowing them to create the most perfect tension to extend the leg or allow bending. Physics and biomechanics also explain why poor hip abductor and/or glute strength can lead to poor control of the thigh (aka femur), which can lead to knee pain with impact.
We say all this to make the point that a good gait analysis and movement evaluation can give us a lot of clues and information about where the pain or dysfunction is coming from. Foot pain can be caused by the foot - or the knee or hips or even the thoracic spine.
So when a runner is experiencing leaking, simply prescribing kegels is not the answer! We have to address the entire biomechanical chain and see where that impact and force is challenging the tissues.
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How Scar Tissue Can Influence Your Running Performance
In many cases, if a runner or athlete has had any kind of tearing or scar tissue at the pelvic floor, perineum, or abdomen, such a c-section or surgical scar, that scar tissue can “block” the load of the force from being transferred and dispersed throughout the body to best absorb the impact. Fascia provides a complex series of highways in our body to allow force to travel upon, and one area of very thick fascia where load is transferred across at heel strike (whether running or walking) is at the perineum. You clunk that up with some scar tissue - even scar tissue that is not painful - and it sends that force on the path of less resistance. These minute biomechanical changes certainly won’t play a huge role in day to day movements in most cases, but when you are doing the same, repetitive movement, such as running miles and miles each week, the body’s compensations can lead to repetitive movement injuries (hip pain, poor alignment, gait changes, etc.)
Kegels Isn't For Everyone: What To Do Instead
Running is high impact, and leaking a little urine is your body’s way of saying, something isn’t quite right. Ignoring leaking over time, for any athlete, means you are ignoring a weakness in the system, which in this case could lead to more leaking, pelvic organ prolapse (POP), pain, or breakdown in other systems as they compensate (such as deep hip pain caused by the obturator internus over working.)
Clamshells and kegels aren’t always the answer. At our boutique locations, every single one of our doctors of physical therapy have been extensively trained to evaluate runners and athletes - whether you like to run 3 miles a week or 30 - and find the root of the dysfunction, leading you to run better, more functionally, faster, and longer, as well as preventing issues that can take you out of the race in the future.
As we ramp up for this Fall’s marathon season, we encourage you - even if you are not leaking - to make an appointment with one of our pelvic floor specialists at any one of our locations to integrate this key, and often overlooked, part of running training. Remember, pelvic floor physical therapists are experts on the entire core - breath, abdominals, pelvis, hips, and up and down the chain - all of which factor into a good, strong run.
Stay the course, and enjoy this and all of your future running seasons in good health.