Episode 255: Your UTIs Might Not Be UTIs β What Your Bladder, Your Vestibule, and Your Hormones Have in Common
If you've ever had urinary symptoms that antibiotics didn't fix β and your cultures kept coming back negative β this episode is for you.
A new 2026 study in the Journal of Sexual Medicine followed 253 women with recurrent UTIs and persistent urogenital symptoms despite negative urine cultures. What researchers found reframes everything: 85% of these women had hormonally mediated vestibulodynia, 75% had pelvic floor hypertonicity, and only 15% had a classic urologic cause for their symptoms.
This isn't a bladder problem. It's a hormone problem β and the vulvar vestibule, urethra, and bladder are one integrated, estrogen- and androgen-responsive system. Whether it presents as genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) in a postmenopausal woman or hormonally mediated vestibulodynia in a younger one, the tissue-level pathophysiology is the same.
In this episode, Dr. Carolyn Moyers breaks down:
β’ Why persistent urinary symptoms after negative cultures have a hormonal explanation
β’ The shared embryologic origin of the vestibule, urethra, and bladder trigone β and why it matters
β’ How androgen deficiency drives vestibular inflammation, pelvic floor guarding, and bladder dysfunction in a self-perpetuating cycle
β’ Why this affects premenopausal women too β 98.9% of premenopausal patients in the study had below-range free testosterone
β’ What the Rubin et al. 2025 data adds: vaginal prasterone (DHEA) was associated with meaningfully lower UTI rates in women with vulvovaginal atrophy β treating the hormone environment changed the urological outcome
β’ What integrated treatment looks like β vaginal estrogen for GSM, compounded estradiol/testosterone gel for vestibulodynia, pelvic floor PT for hypertonic muscles
β’ The honest limits of this research: selection bias, non-uniform hormonal evaluation, absence of long-term outcome data β and what prospective studies still need to answer
This episode builds directly on Episode 149 β When Sex Hurts with Dr. Jill Krapf. If you haven't listened to that one, it is linked below and is essential companion listening.
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/sky-womens-health/id1541657642?i=1000630939731 [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/sky-womens-health/id1541657642?i=1000630939731]
π References & Resources:
β’ Agrawal et al., Journal of Sexual Medicine, 2026 β Hormonally Mediated Vestibulodynia and Persistent Urogenital Symptoms
β’ Rubin et al., Menopause, 2025 β Prevalence of UTIs in Women with Vulvovaginal Atrophy and the Impact of Vaginal Prasterone
β’ Sky Women's Health Podcast β Episode 149: "When Sex Hurts" with Dr. Jill Krapf [link in show notes]
β’ skywomenshealth.com [skywomenshealth.com]
π Connect with Dr. Carolyn Moyers
πΈ Instagram: @drcarolynmoyers [https://www.instagram.com/drcarolynmoyers/]
π₯ YouTube: @drcarolynmoyers [https://www.youtube.com/@drcarolynmoyers]
π Website: www.skywomenshealth.com [https://www.skywomenshealth.com/]
Reacties
0Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst
Meld je nu aan en word lid van de Sky Women's Health community!