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Men’s Pelvic Floor Physical Therapy in Columbia, SC

What it is, who it helps, and what to expect at Vertex PT Specialists

Pelvic floor issues aren’t just a women’s health topic.

At Vertex PT Specialists, we now offer men’s pelvic floor physical therapy in Columbia, SC. If you’re experiencing urinary symptoms, pelvic discomfort, or ongoing pain that hasn’t responded to typical treatment, pelvic floor PT can be a practical, conservative next step.

Visits are private, one-on-one, and built around a clear plan to help you get back to normal life and training.

What Is the Pelvic Floor (and Why It Matters for Men)?

The pelvic floor is a group of muscles and connective tissues at the base of the pelvis. In men, it plays a key role in:

  • Bladder and bowel control

  • Pelvic stability and pressure management (especially with lifting and impact)

  • Breathing mechanics and trunk support

  • Sexual function

  • Comfort with sitting, running, and strength training

Like any muscle group, the pelvic floor can become overactive (too tight), underactive (too weak), or uncoordinated—and those patterns can create symptoms that don’t always feel “pelvic.”

Who Men’s Pelvic Floor PT Helps

Men often put these symptoms off because they’re frustrating, confusing, or uncomfortable to discuss. Pelvic floor PT may help if you’re dealing with:

Urinary symptoms

  • Urinary urgency or frequency (feeling like you have to go often)

  • Leakage or reduced control

  • Feeling like you can’t fully empty

Pelvic pain and related pain patterns

  • Pelvic pain or pressure

  • Persistent testicular pain (when appropriate for PT care)

  • Pain that worsens with sitting, exercise, or certain movements

  • Hip, groin, or low back pain that doesn’t respond to the usual approaches

Post-prostatectomy rehabilitation

Pelvic floor PT is commonly used after prostate surgery to support control, confidence, and a safe return to activity.

If you’ve tried rest, stretching, or strengthening and things keep cycling back—or if you’ve been told “everything looks normal”—a pelvic floor evaluation can help identify what’s driving the issue.

Pelvic Floor PT for Active Men and Athletes

We often see symptoms show up when:

  • Training load increases (heavier lifting, more running, more impact)

  • Breathing and pressure strategies break down under fatigue

  • Hip/trunk strength and pelvic floor timing aren’t syncing well

  • Stress and tension contribute to pelvic floor overactivity

That’s why pelvic floor rehab is rarely “one exercise.” It’s typically a combination of coordination, pressure management, mobility, strength, and return-to-training progressions.

How Pelvic Floor Physical Therapy Helps

Men’s pelvic floor PT is individualized and may include:

  • Education on what’s likely contributing to symptoms

  • Breathing and pressure management strategies

  • Pelvic floor relaxation and coordination training (not always strengthening)

  • Hip and trunk strength/mobility work

  • Manual therapy when appropriate

  • Progressive return to lifting, running, and sport

  • Practical strategies to reduce flare-ups in daily life and training

The goal is straightforward: reduce symptoms and give you tools that hold up in real life.

Meet Dr. Cayley Hollifield, PT, DPT

Cayley Hollifield provides pelvic floor physical therapy for men, including care for urinary symptoms, pelvic pain, testicular pain (when appropriate), and post-prostatectomy rehabilitation. Her approach is practical, patient-first, and focused on helping you return to normal function and training with confidence.

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