GPPPD & Overview - Painful Predicaments
- Genito-Pelvic Pain/Penetration Disorder (GPPPD): Persistent or recurrent difficulties with one or more of the following for at least 6 months:
- Vaginal penetration during intercourse.
- Marked vulvovaginal or pelvic pain during vaginal intercourse or penetration attempts.
- Marked fear or anxiety about vulvovaginal or pelvic pain in anticipation of, during, or as a result of vaginal penetration.
- Marked tensing or tightening of the pelvic floor muscles during attempted vaginal penetration.
- DSM-5 Criteria Summary: Symptoms cause clinically significant distress; not better explained by another disorder, relationship distress, or substance/medication.
- Epidemiology: Affects approximately 10-20% of women; prevalence varies. Often underreported.
⭐ Genito-Pelvic Pain/Penetration Disorder (GPPPD) in DSM-5 combines dyspareunia and vaginismus into a single diagnosis, emphasizing the often overlapping nature of these conditions.
Dyspareunia Deep Dive - Ouch Zones
Dyspareunia: Genital pain before, during, or after intercourse.
| Type | Common Etiologies |
|---|---|
| Superficial | Vulvodynia (provoked vestibulodynia - PVD), infections (candidiasis, HSV), vulvovaginal atrophy, inadequate lubrication, vulvar dermatoses. |
| Deep | Endometriosis, Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID), adnexal pathology (cysts), fibroids, adenomyosis, pelvic adhesions, musculoskeletal conditions. |
- History: Pain onset, location, character.
- Q-tip test: For PVD; identifies specific tender points at vulvar vestibule.
- Bimanual exam: Detects deep pelvic tenderness or masses.
⭐ Provoked vestibulodynia, a common cause of superficial dyspareunia, is typically diagnosed with the cotton swab (Q-tip) test to identify specific tender points at the vulvar vestibule.
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Vaginismus Unveiled - Entry Barriers
- Definition: Involuntary spasm of pelvic floor muscles, primarily pubococcygeus, preventing or making vaginal entry painful.
- Etiologies:
- Psychological: Fear (of pain, pregnancy), anxiety, past sexual trauma, relationship issues.
- Physical: Infections (e.g., vulvovaginitis), childbirth trauma, endometriosis, genitourinary syndrome of menopause.
- Clinical Presentation: Difficulty/impossibility of vaginal penetration (intercourse, tampons, speculum exam); marked fear or anxiety about penetration.
- Diagnostic Approach: Primarily clinical, based on history and gentle pelvic exam (often reveals muscle spasm upon attempted entry). Rule out organic causes.
⭐ The hallmark of vaginismus is the involuntary contraction of the pubococcygeus muscle group (muscles of the outer third of the vagina) upon attempted vaginal penetration.
Management Strategies - Healing Pathways
- Multidisciplinary Approach: Key for comprehensive care.
- General Principles:
- Patient education: Understanding the condition.
- Communication: Open dialogue with partner & clinician.
- Psychosexual counseling: Addressing psychological factors.
- Specific Treatments:
- Dyspareunia: Identify & treat cause (e.g., infection, endometriosis, atrophy). Topical agents (lubricants, estrogen). Pelvic floor physiotherapy.
- Vaginismus: Psychoeducation, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). Systematic desensitization using vaginal dilators. Pelvic floor relaxation exercises.
⭐ Systematic desensitization using vaginal dilators, combined with pelvic floor relaxation exercises, is a highly effective behavioral treatment for vaginismus.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- GPPPD unifies dyspareunia (painful intercourse) and vaginismus (penetration difficulty).
- Vaginismus: Involuntary spasm of pubococcygeus muscle preventing penetration; often psychogenic.
- Superficial dyspareunia causes: Vulvodynia/Vestibulodynia (PVD), infections, atrophy, poor lubrication.
- Deep dyspareunia causes: Endometriosis, PID, adnexal pathology, fibroids.
- Provoked Vestibulodynia (PVD): Diagnosed by Q-tip test (focal vestibular tenderness).
- Management: Multidisciplinary - psychosexual therapy, pelvic floor physiotherapy, treat underlying cause_
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