trampoline /rebounder

Body: 

Hi

I said a while ago that i had found posting's online form women who had found rebounding usefull for prolapse and that i'd find them.

But i've searched through all my files and can't dig em out. Don't know where i put them. Sorry about that.

However bassically the gist of it was that a woman with prolapses used them every day and felt that while they didn't reverse things they strengthened her up for most of the day and that she wouldn't be without it.

There was then just other post's (not first hand experince) saying that they thought that it would be completely contraindicated in prolapse situations.

If i do come across it i'll post it.

xxx

I thought you might be referring to trampoline jumping. I was talking about ballet-type jumping on a wooden floor having only a positive affect on my prolapse. Only time will tell. :-)

interesting thought though. when I was working as a PT we'd sometimes recommend specific jumping exercises to help increase tone...by tone I dont mean muscle strength or appearance, but the muscle's resting elasticity or 'tightness' (think short rubber band vs long overstretched rubber band)

Thank you for the confirmation, granolamom! These are very new concepts, not to mention their conflict with conventional views on prolapse. A new era is dawning for women with these conditions.

christine...I agree - this is all new and very exciting. I have an anatomy question...the uterus is held in place by the broad ligaments (structurally I mean, aside from pressure and posture). are there any muscles, aside from the vagina, that connect the uterus to anything else?

thanks for the description, Christine. I hope you don't mind some more questions...
Its my understanding that ligamentous tissue does not readily 'snap back into shape' after being overstretched. which is why once you sprain your ankle badly or dislocate your shoulder you are prone to those injuries later on. unless of course you are young and still growing so you can in effect grow into your overstretched ligaments. I would imagine the same applies here, once the broad ligaments are stretched, due to pg or poor posture or the like, you do lose some support, no? so in order to support the uterus thereafter one would have to really pay attention to posture.
Are the broad ligaments affected by hormones and menopause? I wonder if they shrink as well.

aha! that makes so much sense to me, and it 'feels' right too.
thank you so much Christine.

Hello,

I tried a little trampolining yesterday evening and felt 'heavier' (cystocele) than I have before in the evening so assumed it wasnt a good thing. I did however have a really hard day yesterday where I was on my feet most of theday and moved (naughty I know) a fair few heavy objects as we were having work done on the house and I had to move a few things around.

Anyway, I thought I'd try the trampoline again this evening as I wasnt convinced it was such a bad idea after reading Christines book where it says running can be very beneficial... I kept the posture throughout my jumps and was very conscious of holding up my pelvic floor and breathing and you know what? It felt REALLY good! My leg muscles feel beautifully stretched too. I only did 5 mins of medium intensity bounces but I feel good!

Watch this space as I intend to try this for a few days...It may all go horribly wrong but I'll keep you posted.

I think my Dr. would have a FIT if she knew I was trampolining!!

Zoe x

I have a beautiful 5 wk old baby boy and a wonderful 2 and a half yr old daughter who make it all worth while :-)

Geez…looks like that might’ve happened when (most of) the old forum was transcribed to this one. Sorry…I’ll go ahead and delete those partial posts.

From my perspective, trampoline jumping is not particularly great for these conditions. Good for overall conditioning, and certainly fun, but we really need gravity to weight-load the body so the spine is forced into its rightful position. When jumping on a trampoline, that most important factor is removed from the equation. If you can jump in the posture, great, but it seems like without gravity people balance by creating kind of a C-shaped spine.

Gravity, breath, and the natural shape of the spine are the fundamental aspects of pelvic organ support.

Christine