Dyspareunia
(Painful Sex)
Compassionate, thoughtful care for pain with intimacy — with evaluation designed to identify the real cause, reduce pain, and help restore comfort, confidence, and connection.
Painful sex should be evaluated, not minimized.
Dyspareunia can involve surface pain at the vaginal opening, deeper pelvic pain, pain related to dryness or tissue changes, pelvic floor muscle tension, vulvar pain conditions, infection, endometriosis, or emotional responses that develop after painful experiences. In many patients, more than one factor is present at the same time.1, 2, 3, 5, 6
That is why treatment should not begin with assumptions. It should begin with a careful conversation, a thoughtful examination when appropriate, and a plan designed around where the pain is happening, what triggers it, and what your body may be telling us.
At Joshua R. Gonzalez, MD, care is designed to feel private, supportive, and collaborative — with attention to both physical recovery and emotional ease.
What patients often describe
The location, timing, and character of pain matter — because different patterns often point toward different causes.1, 2
Pain at entry
Pain at the vaginal opening may be associated with dryness, vestibular pain, pelvic floor tension, vaginismus, or vulvar skin conditions.1, 2, 5
Deep pelvic pain
Deeper pain may suggest pelvic floor dysfunction, endometriosis, or other internal causes that deserve proper evaluation.1, 2, 6
The evaluation should feel careful, not rushed.
Evaluation typically starts with a detailed medical and sexual history, followed by a focused physical and pelvic examination when appropriate. Testing depends on what symptoms and findings suggest.1, 2, 3
- Detailed symptom and sexual history
- Review of lubrication, menopause status, medications, and prior infections
- Physical and pelvic evaluation when clinically appropriate
- Assessment for vulvar, vaginal, muscular, or deeper pelvic sources of pain
- Targeted testing when infection, irritation, or hormonal issues are suspected
Dyspareunia is not one diagnosis. It is a symptom. The best outcomes usually come from identifying the most important contributors rather than applying the same treatment to everyone.1, 2
That may mean addressing dryness or atrophy, referring for pelvic floor physical therapy, treating infection, managing a pain condition like vulvodynia, or incorporating counseling support when fear, stress, or trauma are part of the picture.1, 2, 3, 5
Personalized treatment, based on the cause
Treatment depends on what is driving the pain. The most effective plan is usually targeted, not generic.1, 2, 3
Lubricants and moisturizers
When dryness or friction is part of the problem, lubricants and vaginal moisturizers may help reduce pain during sex.1, 4
Medication treatment
Medication may be used to address infection, inflammation, hormonal changes, or other underlying medical contributors depending on the diagnosis.1, 4, 6
Pelvic floor physical therapy
Pelvic floor PT is often helpful when muscle tension, guarding, or pain with penetration is part of the picture.1, 2, 3
Hormonal support when appropriate
For some patients, especially around menopause, vaginal estrogen may be considered when low-estrogen tissue changes are contributing to pain and dryness.1, 4, 6
Counseling and psychotherapy
Anxiety, fear, trauma, and relational stress can meaningfully shape pain and arousal. Counseling support can be part of excellent care, not separate from it.2, 3
Lifestyle and supportive strategies
Stress reduction, body awareness, gradual reintroduction of penetration, and individualized recommendations can all play a role in improving comfort over time.
A structured, compassionate path forward
The goal of care is to help patients feel understood, informed, and supported — not embarrassed or dismissed.
Conversation first
We begin by understanding the pain itself: where it happens, when it happens, what it feels like, and what has already been tried.
Personalized plan
The treatment plan is tailored to the diagnosis and may include a combination of physical, hormonal, medical, and counseling-based support.
Follow-through
Progress is reassessed over time so the plan can be refined based on how the body is responding and what is improving.
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers, without the noise.
Ready for a more supportive conversation?
If you are experiencing painful sex and want expert, compassionate care in Los Angeles, request a consultation with Joshua R. Gonzalez, MD.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
323.607.2895
Monday–Friday: 9:00 AM–5:00 PM
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