When To Call a Doctor
If you have
chronic female pelvic pain that has not yet been
evaluated, call your health professional for an appointment.
If you have chronic pelvic pain that has already been evaluated,
call a health professional for immediate care if sudden,
severe pelvic pain occurs with or without vaginal bleeding.
Call a health professional if:
- Your periods have changed from relatively
pain-free to painful.
- Pain interferes with your daily
activities.
- You begin to have pain during
intercourse.
- You have painful urination, blood in your urine, or an
inability to control the flow of urine.
- You have blood in the stool
or a significant, unexplained change in your bowel movements.
Even if you have existing pain or other symptoms, call your health
professional if you notice new pelvic symptoms.
Watchful Waiting
Watchful waiting is a period of time during which you and your
health professional observe your pelvic pain symptoms without using additional
medical treatment. During this period, you can keep a daily record of your
symptoms, menstrual cycle, and any other life events that you consider
important. A watchful waiting period may vary from a few days to weeks or
possibly months.
Who To See
Your
family doctor,
general practitioner, or
nurse practitioner can generally evaluate and help you
manage the symptoms of female pelvic pain.
If chronic pelvic pain is to be formally diagnosed or treated
with advanced methods, you may be referred to a
gynecologist, an
internist, or a
urologist who specializes in female pelvic
disorders.
Experts have noted a link between abuse and chronic pelvic
pain.1 If you have ever been physically or sexually
abused, the physical and psychological trauma you have suffered may be playing
a part in your pain. For this reason, it's important that you have a health
professional with whom you are comfortable discussing any past or current
abuse, as well as your current symptoms.
If you have had long-lasting (chronic) pelvic pain that hasn't
responded to treatment or seems to have no physical cause, you may have
developed neuropathic pain, which means your nerves continue to fire pain
signals long after an original injury or disease has healed. If your health
professional suspects that you have neuropathic pain, he or she may refer you
to a pain management clinic for evaluation and
treatment.
To prepare for your appointment, see the topic Making the Most of Your Appointment