Pelvic Health Center overview
A structured overview of Annandale’s pelvic health vision, including pelvic floor disorders, pelvic pain, endometriosis, fibroids, recurrent vaginitis, and pregnancy-to-postpartum readiness.
Center differentiator
Surgeon-sonologist continuity from sonographic mapping through individualized planning, procedure selection, and recovery.
Signature capabilities
- • Pelvic floor and pelvic pain workup
- • Endometriosis and fibroid care
- • Trigger point injections and postpartum recovery
What this center is built to do
The Pelvic Health Center is framed as a comprehensive program for pelvic floor disorders, pelvic pain, endometriosis, fibroids, structural concerns, and coordinated pre- and postpartum recovery. The intent is not only treatment availability but a clearer longitudinal pathway from diagnosis through recovery.
The plan positions pelvic health as both procedural and longitudinal: a patient may need imaging, physical therapy coordination, injections, surgery, postpartum healing support, or none of those depending on anatomy, symptoms, and goals.
Signature differentiator: surgeon-sonologist continuity
A defining idea in the Annandale plan is that the clinician evaluating anatomy by ultrasound is also the clinician responsible for surgical or procedural planning. That reduces handoff gaps and supports more individualized decisions about timing, approach, and expected recovery.
This same continuity model can become a major organizing principle for the repository: users should be able to understand why imaging, anatomy, symptoms, and treatment planning are discussed together instead of as separate disconnected topics.
Core service lines in this center
Priority topics include pelvic floor disorders, bladder dysfunction, chronic and acute pelvic pain, advanced endometriosis care, fibroid treatment with fertility preservation where possible, recurrent vaginitis workups, trigger point injections, cervical cerclage, postpartum birth trauma assessment, and fourth-trimester rehabilitation coordination.
For the repository, these should become both user-facing learning pages and index anchors in the left navigation so people can browse by condition, treatment, and care stage.