BMJ  2005;331:249-250 (30 July), doi:10.1136/bmj.331.7511.249

Editorial

Pelvic girdle pain in pregnancy

Exercises may help, and evidence is increasing that acupuncture reduces pain

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Musculoskeletal pain in the pelvic area is common during pregnancy and can cause substantial distress and disruption of function. The lack of any standard definitions of such pain, however, makes it difficult to compare reports of prevalence, treatments, and outcomes. Useful terms for different clinical subgroups include pregnancy related pelvic girdle pain and pregnancy related low back pain.1 Authors of British review articles and case reports often use the term symphysis pubis dysfunction to describe the pain, but others consider that such dysfunction is more often a secondary problem coexisting with lumbar or sacroiliac pain.

A systematic review of 28 studies that used the two terms pregnancy related pelvic girdle pain and pregnancy related low back pain found that prevalence ranged from 3.9% to 89.9% (mean 45.3%).1 This wide range illustrates the problems of definition, identification, and classification. The authors found that estimates of prevalence depended on the inclusion . . . [Full text of this article]

R William Stones, senior lecturer in obstetrics and gynaecology

University of Southampton School of Medicine, Southampton SO16 5YA
(r.w.stones@soton.ac.uk)

Kathleen Vits, clinical specialist physiotherapist

Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Princess Anne Hospital, Southampton


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Effects of acupuncture and stabilising exercises as adjunct to standard treatment in pregnant women with pelvic girdle pain: randomised single blind controlled trial
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Dominic J Aldington
bmj.com, 2 Aug 2005 [Full text]
Safety of acupuncture in pregnancy
George T Lewith
bmj.com, 16 Aug 2005 [Full text]
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