Wednesday, 28 January 2026

Chronic Pelvic Pain: The Overlooked Musculoskeletal Cause And How Physiotherapy Can Help?


  Chronic pelvic pain is a condition that affects both men and women, yet it is one of the most misunderstood and under-treated pain problems. Many patients spend months or even years visiting gynecologists, urologists, and general physicians, undergoing scans, blood tests, and medications — yet their pain continues. What is often missed is that chronic pelvic pain is frequently driven by musculoskeletal and myofascial dysfunction, not just internal organ problems. At CB Physiotherapy, a comprehensive musculoskeletal approach can play a crucial role in identifying and treating the real source of pain.

This blog explores how chronic pelvic pain can originate from muscles, joints, and nerves — and how physiotherapy offers a safe, evidence-based solution.

 



What Is Chronic Pelvic Pain?

Chronic pelvic pain is defined as pain in the lower abdomen or pelvic region lasting more than 3 to 6 months, and severe enough to affect daily activities, work, or quality of life. Common descriptions from patients include:


1. Deep aching or heaviness in the pelvis

2. Burning or sharp pain in the lower abdomen

3. Pain during sitting for long periods

4. Pain during or after intercourse

5. Tailbone pain

6. Groin or inner thigh discomfort

7. Unexplained bladder or bowel discomfort

In many cases, imaging such as ultrasound, CT scan, or MRI may appear normal — leading patients to feel frustrated or dismissed.

 


The Hidden Musculoskeletal Link

The pelvis is a complex region where muscles, joints, ligaments, fascia, and nerves work closely with internal organs. When musculoskeletal structures become dysfunctional, they can mimic or contribute to pelvic pain. Some commonly overlooked causes include:



1. Pelvic Floor Muscle Dysfunction

 Pelvic floor muscles can become:

1. Overactive (tight and unable to relax)

2. Weak and poorly coordinated

3. Painful with trigger points

4. Tight pelvic floor muscles can cause:

5. Pain with sitting

6. Pain during intimacy

7. Urinary urgency

8. A feeling of pressure or heaviness


2. Sacroiliac Joint (SI Joint) Dysfunction

The SI joints connect the spine to the pelvis. Even subtle dysfunction can refer pain to:

1. Lower abdomen

2. Groin

3. Buttocks

4. Hip region

5. Pelvic area

6. This is often mistaken for gynecological or urological pain.


3. Myofascial Trigger Points

Trigger points in muscles such as:

1. Obturator internus

2. Iliopsoas

3. Piriformis

4. Adductors

5. Lower abdominal muscles

6. can refer pain directly into the pelvis, bladder region, or perineum, creating symptoms that feel “internal.”


4. Nerve Sensitization

 Chronic pain can cause nerves such as:

1. Pudendal nerve

2. Ilioinguinal nerve

3. Genitofemoral nerve

4. to become hypersensitive, leading to burning, electric, or stabbing pain sensations.

 

Why Medications and Scans Often Don’t Solve It?

Painkillers, antibiotics, or hormonal treatments may temporarily reduce symptoms but do not address muscle tension, joint restriction, or nerve irritation.

Similarly, scans focus mainly on organs and bones — but:

1. Muscle tension

2. Fascial tightness

3. Movement dysfunction

4. Poor pelvic control

5. do not always appear on imaging.

6. This is why many patients are told “everything is normal” despite real, ongoing pain.

 

How Physiotherapy at CB Can Help?

At CB Physiotherapy, a specialized musculoskeletal and movement-based approach allows therapists to identify the real drivers of chronic pelvic pain.

1. Detailed Musculoskeletal Assessment

This includes:

1. Pelvic alignment

2. Hip and lumbar spine mobility

3. Muscle length and strength testing

4. Trigger point evaluation

5. Functional movement analysis

6. This helps differentiate between organ-based and movement-based pain sources.

2. Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy (When Indicated)

For appropriate patients, physiotherapy may focus on:

1.Pelvic floor relaxation techniques

2. Breathing retraining

3. Down-training overactive muscles

4. Coordination and control exercises

5. This is especially helpful for patients with pain related to tight or guarded pelvic muscles.

3. Manual Therapy and Myofascial Release

Targeted hands-on techniques can:

1. Release tight pelvic and hip muscles

2. Improve tissue mobility

3. Reduce trigger point sensitivity

4. Improve blood flow and healing

4. Core and Pelvic Stability Training

Poor control of deep core and pelvic muscles can overload sensitive tissues. Physiotherapy helps:

1. Restore balanced muscle activation

2. Improve load distribution

3. Reduce strain on pain-sensitive structures

5. Nervous System Desensitization

Chronic pain often involves central sensitization. Education, graded movement, and pacing strategies help:

1. Calm the nervous system

2. Reduce pain amplification

3. Improve confidence with movement

 

Who Should Consider Physiotherapy for Pelvic Pain?

Physiotherapy is especially helpful if you:

1. Have ongoing pelvic pain with normal scans

2. Experience pain while sitting

3. Have tailbone, groin, or hip pain with pelvic symptoms

4. Have bladder or bowel discomfort without a clear medical cause

5. Have pain after childbirth or abdominal surgery

6. Have pain that worsens with stress or prolonged postures

 

A Different Way to Understand Pelvic Pain

At CB Physiotherapy, chronic pelvic pain is not viewed as “just in your head” or purely an internal problem. It is understood as a complex interaction between muscles, joints, nerves, and the nervous system.

By addressing these physical contributors, many patients finally experience:

1. Reduced pain

2. Improved sitting tolerance

3. Better movement confidence

4. Improved quality of life

5. Reduced dependence on medication

 

Chronic pelvic pain does not have to be a lifelong struggle. When musculoskeletal factors are properly assessed and treated, physiotherapy can be a powerful and often missing part of recovery.

If you or someone you know has persistent pelvic pain with no clear answers, a physiotherapy assessment at CB may uncover causes that have been overlooked — and open the door to meaningful, lasting relief.

Beyond Discharge: How Cb Physiotherapy Helps Patients Stay Pain-free Long Term?


 Many patients feel confused and disappointed when pain returns after successful treatment. They often say, “I was completely fine… why has the pain come back again?” This return of symptoms is called relapse, and it is far more common than people realize. The truth is, relapse does not mean treatment failed — it usually means maintenance was skipped. At CB Physiotherapy, relapse prevention is not an afterthought; it is a core part of recovery.

 



What Is a Relapse in Physiotherapy?


A relapse occurs when symptoms return after improvement or recovery. This may happen in conditions such as:

1. Back and neck pain

2. Disc-related problems

3. Knee and shoulder injuries

4. Tendinitis and muscle strains

5. Postural pain

6. Sports injuries

7. Most relapses happen not because of new injury, but due to a return to old habits, poor load management, or stopping exercises too early.

 


Why Pain Often Comes Back After Treatment?


Pain relief is only one phase of recovery. When patients stop treatment as soon as pain reduces, the deeper causes remain.

Common reasons for relapse include:

1. Weak muscles not fully rehabilitated

2. Poor posture returning during work or daily life

3. Sudden increase in physical activity

4. Long sitting hours without movement control

5. Stress and fatigue affecting recovery

6. Ignoring early warning signs

7. Pain relief can occur quickly, but tissue strength, endurance, and movement control take longer to rebuild.

 


Difference Between Recovery and Maintenance

Most people believe treatment ends when pain ends. In reality, that is when maintenance should begin.

1. Recovery phase focuses on:

Reducing pain and inflammation

Improving mobility

Restoring basic movement


2. Maintenance phase focuses on:

Preventing recurrence

Building long-term strength and endurance

Improving posture and movement habits

Teaching self-management strategies

Skipping maintenance is like repairing a crack but ignoring the foundation.

 


Why Maintenance Therapy Is Crucial?

Your body adapts to how you use it daily. If work stress, posture, or activity overload returns, pain often follows.

Maintenance physiotherapy:

1. Keeps muscles strong and flexible

2. Maintains spinal and joint health

3. Identifies early dysfunction before pain worsens

4. Improves long-term function and confidence

5. Reduces dependency on medicines and injections

At CB Physiotherapy, maintenance care is personalized, not generic.

 


How CB Physiotherapy Prevents Relapse?


CB Physiotherapy follows a structured relapse-prevention approach that goes beyond short-term relief.

1. Individual Risk Assessment

Each patient is assessed for relapse risk based on lifestyle, work pattern, posture, and activity level.

2. Condition-Specific Maintenance Programs

Maintenance plans differ for disc issues, arthritis, sports injuries, and postural pain. There is no “one-size-fits-all.”

3. Gradual Load Progression

Patients are guided on how to safely return to gym, sports, or daily activities without overloading tissues.

4. Posture and Ergonomic Correction

Small daily habits often cause big relapses. These are corrected early.

5. Periodic Reassessment Sessions

Scheduled follow-ups help catch problems before pain fully returns.

6. Home Program Education

Patients are taught when to progress, modify, or pause exercises — empowering self-care.

 


Conditions That Strongly Need Maintenance Care


Maintenance physiotherapy is especially important for:

1. Recurrent back and neck pain

2. Disc bulge or degeneration

3. Osteoarthritis

4. Shoulder impingement and rotator cuff injuries

5. Knee pain in active or aging individuals

6. Athletes returning to sport

7. Ignoring maintenance in these conditions significantly increases relapse chances.

 


Early Warning Signs Patients Should Not Ignore


Relapse does not happen suddenly. The body gives signals such as:

1. Morning stiffness returning

2. Mild pain after long sitting

3. Reduced flexibility

4. Fatigue during activities

5. Fear or hesitation with movement

At CB Physiotherapy, patients are encouraged to report these signs early — before pain becomes severe.

 


Maintenance Is Not Lifetime Treatment — It’s Smart Care


Many patients worry maintenance means endless sessions. That is not true.

Maintenance physiotherapy is:

1. Less frequent

2. Goal-oriented

3. Preventive rather than reactive

4. It saves time, money, and discomfort in the long run.

5. Relapse is not a failure — it is feedback. It shows that the body still needs support, guidance, and balance.


At CB Physiotherapy, the goal is not just to help patients recover, but to help them stay pain-free.

Because true success in physiotherapy is not how fast pain disappears —

it’s how long it stays away.