The bathroom battle parents know too well
It is 7 a.m. on a school day. Your 8-year-old is crying in the bathroom again.
The pediatrician already prescribed polyethylene glycol, a common laxative sold as MiraLAX. It helps. Sort of. But the pain and the fear and the accidents keep coming back.
Functional constipation in kids is rarely just about fiber. It is a tangled mix of stretched-out bowels, muscles that have forgotten how to relax, and a child who now braces every time they sit on the toilet.
Functional constipation affects up to 1 in 3 children at some point. It is one of the top reasons families visit pediatric gastroenterologists.
Standard care is laxatives, diet changes, and toilet routines. That works for many kids. But a stubborn group stays stuck for years.
Their problem is not just the stool. It is the muscles of the pelvic floor (the sling of muscles that hold the bottom of the belly) refusing to relax on command.
The old way versus the new way
The old plan looked like this. Keep giving laxatives. Hope the muscles relearn on their own. Wait it out.
For many kids that took months or years. And the longer the cycle ran, the more shame and fear built up.
Here is the shift. A new systematic review pulled together seven randomized trials (the gold standard of research), with 775 children total, to test whether pelvic floor physiotherapy adds real value on top of normal medical care.
Think of it like learning to whistle
Imagine trying to teach a child to whistle by yelling instructions through a door. No feedback. No mirror. Just guesses.
That is how pooping works for a lot of constipated kids. They do not feel what their muscles are doing.
Pelvic floor physiotherapy opens the door. Through exercises, biofeedback (sensors that show muscle activity on a screen), gentle belly massage, and sometimes mild electrical stimulation, the child finally sees and feels what "relax" looks like.
It is not magic. It is coaching for muscles that never learned the job.
The review searched four major medical databases for randomized controlled trials comparing pelvic floor physiotherapy with standard medical treatment in children and adolescents.
Sample sizes ran from 45 to 400 kids per study. The interventions varied. Some used exercises alone. Others added biofeedback, telerehabilitation (therapy over video), visceral mobilization (a hands-on abdominal technique), or electrostimulation.
Study quality was judged with the PEDro scale, a standard tool for rating physical therapy research.
Across the trials, kids who got pelvic floor physiotherapy had less painful defecation, better stool consistency, and higher quality of life than kids on standard care alone.
The effect size was described as large for pain reduction. In plain English, this was not a subtle blip. Kids and parents noticed it.
One finding was less consistent. The number of bowel movements per week improved only modestly (about one extra per week on average). So kids pooped more comfortably, even if not always more often.
Pelvic floor therapy did not replace laxatives. It worked alongside them.
Where this fits in the bigger picture
Adult pelvic floor therapy has been mainstream for years, from postpartum recovery to incontinence. Pediatric use has lagged behind.
Part of the lag is practical. Few clinics have therapists trained for kids. Insurance coverage is spotty. And convincing a 7-year-old to do biofeedback exercises requires skill.
This review is the first to pool the pediatric numbers in a meta-analysis. It gives pediatricians something concrete to point to when referring families out.
If your child has been on laxatives for months without full relief, ask your pediatrician or pediatric GI doctor about pelvic floor physiotherapy.
Look for a therapist with specific pediatric pelvic floor training. Not every physical therapist has it.
This is not a quick fix. Expect several sessions over weeks or months. And expect to keep the laxative going in the meantime. Most trials combined the two.
Honest limitations
The seven trials used very different protocols. Some lasted weeks, others months. Some used biofeedback, others did not. That makes it hard to say which exact recipe works best.
Most studies followed kids for less than a year. We do not know if the benefits hold up over time.
Blinding was also tricky. Kids and therapists knew which treatment was being given, which can nudge the results.
The authors call for large, multicenter trials with standardized protocols and longer follow-up. That would answer two key questions. Which version of pelvic floor therapy works best? And does the benefit last into adulthood?
Meanwhile, expect more pediatric GI clinics to start bundling physiotherapy into their standard care plans. The evidence is not perfect, but it is strong enough to act on.