Sex efficiency through exercises : special physical culture for women / by Th. H. van de Velde ; [photos, by E. Steinemann].
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CHAPTER IX
USES IN PARTURITION OR BIRTH
Sex efficiency through pelvic exercises may be just as
valuable in the act of birth as in the act of mating. The
pelvic floor muscles are somewhat limited in their accessory
possible functions, and can help principally by active dilation
or relaxation. But this active dilation can very appreciably
help birth as well as preserve the perivaginal muscles from
injury. I am in agreement with Westmann that " an active
cramp or convulsive contraction of the pelvic floor, in
reaction to the pains of labour, can materially hinder and
delay the emergence of the head." And every midwife,
every obstetrician, knows what that means! If the
parturient mother has been weakened and exhausted by
prolonged labour to such a degree that she can no longer
control this automatic resistance of the tissues of her pelvic
floor, her child risks death before it sees the light of day.
And many " forceps deliveries," with all the disadvantages
they entail for mother and baby, might be avoided if women
had learnt to " loosen the pelvic floor." And what needless
accumulation and prolongation of pain ! Not only through
the protracted ordeal of birth, but also because of the
simultaneous convulsions of the expulsive uterine muscle,
and resistance of the pelvic floor, with the dangers of exten-
sive ruptures and lacerations !
Of course, the muscles are not the only resistant factors
in the pelvic floor. This rigidity is often shared by the
tendinous fibres (fascice), the connective tissue, the vaginal
wall and the skin, especially in the far from infrequent cases
of a certain degree of arrest of growth or infantilism. Or there
may be diminished elasticity because the first birth takes
place much later than Nature intended. The vaginal and
pelvic tissues are most supple and elastic in the early twenties