Track Pelvic Pain and See the Full Pattern
Pelvic pain can be cyclical, activity-related, or constant in the background. Tracking helps separate random discomfort from repeatable patterns linked to your cycle, digestion, urinary symptoms, posture, and stress.
Why track this symptom?
- See whether pain peaks around ovulation, menstruation, or specific activities.
- Document location, intensity, and duration to distinguish flares from chronic baseline pain.
- Bring objective data to gynecology, primary care, or pelvic-floor appointments.
How Trace helps
Trace makes logging fast enough for real life. One tap captures the event, and trend views reveal when pelvic pain is improving, recurring, or shifting over time.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I log for pelvic pain?
Log timing, pain side/location, severity, duration, and any associated symptoms such as bloating, urinary discomfort, spotting, or nausea. Note what improved or worsened it.
How does tracking pelvic pain help diagnosis?
Pattern quality matters clinically. A structured log helps your clinician assess whether pain appears cyclic, inflammatory, musculoskeletal, or linked to bladder or bowel function.
When should I seek urgent care for pelvic pain?
Seek urgent care for sudden severe pain, pain with fever, fainting, heavy bleeding, or possible pregnancy complications. For recurrent pain, bring your log to a scheduled visit.
Read the complete guide: How to Track Pelvic Pain: A Practical Guide →