Things That Happen On Your Vagina After Give Birth!

9 months pregnancy is already difficult as ever, why women should have another concern about their body after labor?

Well, Don’t get scare but start to increase your awareness regarding this new things.

1. Your vagina can feel looser

After pushing out something the size of a watermelon, it’s normal for a woman’s pelvic floor muscles to relax and lose a little tone. That can make the vagina feel looser, especially in the first year after delivery.

How much roomier your vagina will feel depends on many factors, including how long you were in labor and how big yournewborn was. (This is one change women who deliver via C-section are unlikely to experience, since the baby didn’t exit through the vagina.)

If the looseness bothers you, you can take steps to tighten things up.

Doing Kegel exercises regularly can help you go back to feeling pretty normal over time.

Maintaining a healthy weight and taking care of your health overall will also help your vagina return to its usual size and feel.

2. It might go dry

Vaginal dryness is one of the most common complaints from new moms who are nursing.

Breastfeeding causes estrogen levels to plunge, and the lack of estrogen can leave some women feeling like the Sahara down below.

Since it’s tied to breastfeeding, vaginal dryness is typically a temporary thing. Usually as soon as you stop nursing and resume your period, your estrogen levels boost up, you’re ovulating again, and things tend to get back to normal.

So if you’re ready to resume having sex again but dryness is making things difficult, it’s time to hit the lubricant aisle of your local pharmacy.

If lube doesn’t help you get back in the groove, ask your gynecologist for a prescription estrogen vaginal cream.

3. It can feel pretty sore

Delivering a baby can be so rough on the vagina, the surrounding tissue can tear. Tears are typically sewn up with dissolvable stitches immediately after the baby comes out. But actually recovering from the pain and trauma may take some time, especially if the tear involves not just skin but muscle as well.

To be add, the doctors might encourage women to sit in a warm tub or a sit in bath to help keep swelling and pain down.

4. The color could change

Don’t be alarmed if your vulva—the area just outside the vaginal canal that includes the labia, clitoris, and the perineum (the skin between the vagina and rectum)—changes shades after delivery.

“These areas are subject to pigment changes not only due to hormone changes during pregnancy, but also because of scarring or tearing [surgical] repairs after childbirth,”

Generally speaking, the color gets darker. Unless something looks scary like a dark mole you’d be alarmed by anywhere else on your body, there’s no need for concern.

Color changes that are hormone-driven can affect women who have had C-sections too.

Whether they happen after a vaginal delivery or Ceasarean, they may fade over time, but they usually don’t go away for good.

5. You’ll have bloody discharge

A story about vaginal changes wouldn’t be complete without mentioning discharge, right? Whether you have a C-section or deliver vaginally, the vagina will excrete something from the uterus called lochia, a combination of blood, mucus, and fluid.

“Lochia will change color and consistency as the weeks go on and usually by six weeks post-partum, it’s finished.”

There’s no reason to be alarmed by lochia unless it’s accompanied by a foul odor, pain, or itching.

Based on research, once you start ovulating again and your period resumes, you’ll start seeing your usual day-to-day discharge.

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