Experiencing Vaginal Dryness? Here's What You Need to Know.
One ob-gyn shares how she helps her patients with
vaginal dryness.
Vaginal dryness can cause irritation, burning, and
pain with intercourse. It’s common after menopause, and it also can happen in
the years leading up to menopause. Often, my patients notice symptoms when they
haven’t been sexually active for a long time. Then they are intimate with a
partner and find that sex is painful.
Here’s
what you should know
about vaginal dryness.
The cause is often low hormone levels related to
menopause.
After and around the time of menopause, your body
makes less estrogen. Estrogen is a hormone that helps maintain the vagina’s
lubrication, elasticity, and thickness. Low levels of estrogen can cause
thinning, drying, and inflammation of vaginal walls. This is called vaginal
atrophy.
But
there are other causes too.
Low estrogen and vaginal dryness can happen at other
times. Estrogen levels can fall after childbirth, with breastfeeding, during
cancer treatment, or with anti-estrogen drugs.
Then there are non-hormonal factors. Cold and allergy
medications and some antidepressants can dry out vaginal tissue. Sjögren
syndrome, an autoimmune condition that can cause a dry mouth and eyes, also can
cause vaginal dryness.
There
may be symptoms besides vaginal irritation or painful sex.
Dryness isn’t always just inside the vaginal canal.
Less estrogen means less natural vaginal moisture. This can dry and irritate
the vulva, the external female genital area. Women with vulvar dryness often
notice irritation when they’re putting on their underwear.
Some women also have increased urinary frequency or
repeated urinary tract infections (UTIs) along with vaginal dryness. When this
group of symptoms happens during menopause, ob-gyns call it genitourinary
syndrome of menopause.
Moisturizers
and lubricants often help.
For vaginal dryness by itself, I recommend trying
over-the-counter moisturizers and lubricants.
Vaginal moisturizers add moisture around and inside
the vagina. There are two types. Internal moisturizers are inserted into the
vagina, where they help build up vaginal tissue. External moisturizers are made
for the vulva.
Lubricants decrease discomfort during intercourse.
Sexually active women should use lubricants in addition to a vaginal
moisturizer. I prefer water-based lubricants, though they don’t last as long as
silicone-based products. Skip oil-based lubricants.
See your ob-gyn if irritation and pain during sex
don’t improve after 2 months of use, or if you have other symptoms.
Hormonal treatments also may be an option.
I often talk with patients about hormonal treatments
when vaginal dryness comes along with urinary symptoms or menopausal symptoms,
such as hot flashes.
Estrogen creams and tablets are inserted a few times a
week into the vagina. Creams must be measured and can get messy. Tablets are a
good alternative.
Vaginal rings are placed in the vagina by the patient.
They release a low dose of estrogen over 90 days.
These treatments deliver less estrogen than typical
hormone therapy and have fewer risks. Talk with your ob-gyn about the pros and
cons of different hormonal options.
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