Pelvic floor muscles are central to continence, pelvic-organ support, childbirth mechanics and long-term quality of life. This article examines pelvic floor anatomy and the clinical consequences of obstetric mechanical stress. Global evidence suggests that pelvic organ prolapse affects a substantial proportion of women, while childbirth, age, obesity and connective-tissue factors contribute to risk. The pelvic floor should be understood as a dynamic muscular-fascial system rather than a static anatomical base. Prevention requires anatomy-based education, respectful childbirth care, early symptom recognition and rehabilitation pathways
Publication Date: 2026-06-20