RESTORING CORE BALANCE WITH PELVIC FLOOR HEALTH
By: Lennard M. Goetze, Ed.D
The foundation of healthy aging is balance—physically, hormonally, and emotionally. Among the body’s most overlooked systems, the pelvic floor quietly governs posture, continence, and core stability. When compromised, it can lead to cascading problems—urinary urgency, incontinence, pelvic pain, loss of mobility, and even fall risk. For the aging population, these issues often mark the tipping point between Independence and frailty. At Northwell Health’s STARS (Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation Services), DR. LEAH ANGELLE is redefining pelvic rehabilitation as an essential part of smarter aging and longevity medicine. Her approach combines clinical science with hands-on precision to restore the body’s central balance—supporting not just recovery, but the resilience needed to prevent falls and preserve quality of life. “We don’t just treat dysfunction,” Dr. Angelle explains. “We strengthen the foundation that supports everything else—core stability, mobility, and confidence.”“We don’t just treat dysfunction,” Dr. Angelle explains. “We strengthen the foundation that supports everything else—core stability, mobility, and confidence.”
The Power Beneath the Surface
The pelvic floor is a network of muscles and connective tissues that stabilize the pelvis, control bladder and bowel function, and support the spine. When weakened or restricted, this system can trigger far-reaching effects: instability, pain, and even changes in posture and gait.Dr. Angelle sees this in patients of every age and background—from postpartum women to aging adults with neurological or surgical complications. Her treatments emphasize re-education of the core and gluteal structures while freeing tissue restrictions through manual therapy and myofascial release.
“It’s hard to know whether a patient’s dysfunction is caused by surgery, aging, or prior illness,” she says. “But we treat the whole system—strengthening the pelvic floor, core, hips, and surrounding musculature to restore natural control.”
Her work exemplifies the whole-body approach to restorative therapy, aligning perfectly with broader initiatives in fall prevention and longevity care.
Hands-On Healing in a Digital World
In an era when telehealth dominates much of rehabilitation, Dr. Angelle remains deeply committed to the hands-on craft of physical therapy. Her sessions are tactile, precise, and grounded in the understanding that true recovery requires more than instruction—it requires touch.
“Our entire assessment depends on palpation,” she explains. “Feeling how tissue moves tells us what the body can’t verbalize. Half of my treatment is hands-on—releasing restrictions, improving circulation, and retraining the body’s memory of movement.”
Her thirty-to-sixty-minute sessions often include soft-tissue and suprapubic work, cupping therapy, and abdominal mobilization, promoting circulation and tissue elasticity where stiffness impedes function. Patients are also guided in customized home programs—ranging from toileting retraining to stretching, strengthening, and, for some, the use of dilators or pelvic wands to restore elasticity and comfort.
“Pelvic health therapy,” she adds, “is as much about habit retraining as it is about muscle retraining. Healing happens between sessions—the body learns by doing.”
Technology Meets Therapeutic Precision
Before joining Northwell, Dr. Angelle practiced in Houston, where she refined her expertise in advanced modalities that are now shaping the future of pelvic rehabilitation. Among these are:
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Biofeedback and EMG systems that use internal or external sensors to display muscle activation on a monitor, helping patients visualize and control pelvic muscle engagement.
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Ultrasound imaging for biofeedback, allowing patients to watch in real-time how muscles and organs interact—strengthening the connection between mind and body.
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PTNS (Posterior Tibial Nerve Stimulation), a minimally invasive technique that uses a fine needle and low-frequency current near the ankle to modulate bladder control through the S3 nerve root.
Each of these technologies complements her manual and exercise-based care, allowing therapy to progress from awareness to mastery.
“When patients see their own progress—literally on a screen—it changes everything,” she says. “They realize they have control again.”
A Calling Born from Personal Experience
Like many specialists, Dr. Angelle’s passion comes from personal experience. As a young woman, she faced her own pelvic health challenges and saw firsthand how deeply they can affect confidence and connection.“Pelvic dysfunction affects every part of life,” she reflects. “If you can’t be intimate, or you’re afraid to leave home because of leakage, it changes how you see yourself. These are issues people often suffer in silence—and they deserve to be addressed with compassion and science.”
Her empathy translates into an environment where patients feel seen and supported, regardless of age, gender, or background. “I see both men and women for urinary, bowel, and pain-related issues,” she adds. “We address everything from post-surgical recovery to sexual health—because it’s all part of restoring quality of life.”
Education, Empowerment, and the Science of Change
For Dr. Angelle, every treatment plan is an education. She guides patients to understand the “why” behind their symptoms, empowering them to change lifelong habits.
“A lot of dysfunction starts with poor daily patterns—how we sit, how we breathe, even how we use the bathroom,” she explains. “We retrain those habits alongside the musculature. I’m a coach as much as a clinician.”
This approach makes her an integral part of multidisciplinary longevity programs, where pelvic health intersects with neuromuscular stability, gait retraining, and core rehabilitation. Her collaborative work supports individuals recovering from trauma, surgery, or degenerative conditions—restoring both function and confidence.
The Doctor Behind the Expertise
Dr. Leah Angelle earned her Doctor of Physical Therapy degree from Louisiana State University Health Shreveport. She is CAPP-OB Certified, a Credentialed Clinical Instructor, and a member of the American Physical Therapy Association’s Pelvic Health and Acute Care Sections and the Texas and Louisiana Chapters. Her certifications include dry needling, manual therapy, and advanced pelvic rehabilitation training. Through Northwell’s STARS program, she brings evidence-based care to patients across New York, combining the precision of modern physical therapy with the empathy of patient-centered medicine.
Changing the Conversation on Pelvic Health
Pelvic health is no longer a niche specialty—it’s becoming a vital pillar of preventive care, especially in the context of aging and longevity. By restoring muscular harmony and stability, Dr. Angelle’s work helps patients move confidently, reduce falls, and reclaim their sense of self.
“Pelvic floor therapy isn’t just about recovery,” she concludes. “It’s about reclaiming strength, dignity, and control. Once patients understand that, they stand taller—literally and figuratively.”
In the continuum of smarter aging, Dr. Leah Angelle reminds us that true vitality starts from the center. Her work embodies the quiet power of balance—the foundation of every step, every breath, and every confident life.
PART 2
Imaging the Foundation: The Diagnostic Science of Pelvic Floor Health
By Robert L. Bard, MD, DABR, FAIUM, FASLMS
The pelvic floor is far more than an anatomical structure—it is the base of human function and the center of physical resilience. Its dysfunction, often hidden beneath layers of muscle and connective tissue, can affect urinary control, sexual function, gait, balance, and core stability. Yet for many years, this vital system has remained under-diagnosed, misunderstood, or entirely overlooked.
As a diagnostic imaging specialist, my mission is to give visibility to what the eye cannot see. Modern high-resolution ultrasound allows us to visualize the integrity and mobility of the pelvic muscles, ligaments, and organs in real time. We can measure elasticity, detect atrophy, evaluate scar tissue, and even assess neuromuscular activation during contraction or strain. This makes ultrasound a powerful, non-invasive tool for understanding the exact cause of pelvic dysfunction—whether structural, neurological, or vascular.
Beyond traditional ultrasound, advanced modalities now offer even deeper insights. Doppler imaging can detect microvascular flow and inflammation, often revealing early indicators of tissue stress or impaired healing. Elastography, another evolving technology, measures tissue stiffness and identifies regions of fibrosis or atrophy before they manifest as pain or incontinence. Together, these technologies redefine how clinicians can approach pelvic health—not through guesswork, but through precise, image-guided understanding.
This diagnostic clarity is where true collaboration begins. Pelvic floor disorders are not isolated issues—they intersect with multiple domains of medicine. In aging, weakened musculature and hormonal shifts can alter pelvic stability, leading to urinary incontinence or prolapse. In trauma, including falls, childbirth injuries, or surgical complications, micro-tears and nerve compression often remain undetected without imaging. Chronic pain, postural imbalance, and even digestive dysfunction may all have origins in this central core system.
Professionals like Dr. Leah Angelle exemplify the next generation of integrative care. Her hands-on rehabilitation complements imaging-based diagnostics perfectly—creating a complete picture of both structure and function. When physical therapy and diagnostic science work in tandem, we move from reactive treatment to precision prevention. This model not only accelerates recovery but empowers patients to understand their own anatomy, transforming fear into confidence and immobility into action.
At Bard Diagnostic Imaging, our collaborative approach is guided by this principle: the best medicine is shared medicine. Working alongside pelvic rehabilitation experts like Dr. Angelle allows us to translate imaging findings into targeted, evidence-based care plans. By visualizing healing, we can verify progress, personalize interventions, and inspire long-term adherence to healthier movement.
The pelvic floor is the body’s foundation—its stability determines the performance of everything above it. To strengthen this foundation, we must first see it clearly. Through advanced imaging, multidisciplinary partnerships, and education, we are shaping a new standard of care: one where every patient has the tools, the insight, and the support to stand stronger—at every stage of life.
PART 3:
Across the Lifespan: Prevention, Confidence, and Daily Function
Pelvic floor care is often misunderstood as a niche specialty limited to postpartum women or advanced age. In reality, it is a lifespan discipline—relevant to men and women from early adulthood through later decades of life. Dr. Leah Angelle’s clinical experience spans patients from their late teens into their nineties, revealing a consistent truth: pelvic floor dysfunction rarely appears suddenly. It develops gradually, shaped by habits, movement patterns, trauma, surgery, and prolonged inactivity.
Unlike orthopedic injuries that are visible and openly discussed, pelvic floor disorders tend to remain hidden. Patients may quietly adapt—avoiding long outings, limiting social engagement, or withdrawing from intimacy due to fear of leakage, pain, or urgency. These adaptations, while understandable, often accelerate physical decline and emotional isolation. “If you’re afraid to leave home or anxious about losing control in public,” Dr. Angelle explains, “that impacts how you live your life—and how you see yourself.”
From a smarter aging perspective, pelvic floor
rehabilitation becomes a preventive
strategy, not merely a corrective one. Core stability, continence,
posture, and balance are deeply interconnected. When pelvic musculature weakens
or becomes restricted, the body compensates elsewhere—often at the expense of
gait stability and fall resistance. Addressing pelvic health early helps
preserve independence, mobility, and confidence as the body ages.
Equally important is Dr. Angelle’s commitment
to hands-on care in an increasingly virtual healthcare landscape. While
telehealth offers accessibility, pelvic floor rehabilitation relies heavily on
tactile assessment—feeling tissue movement, identifying restrictions, and
guiding neuromuscular response. These elements are critical for accurate
diagnosis and meaningful progress, particularly in aging or post-trauma
populations where subtle dysfunction can have outsized consequences.
Ultimately, pelvic floor therapy represents more than symptom relief—it is a gateway to resilience. By restoring the body’s foundational support system, patients reclaim movement, dignity, and the freedom to engage fully in life. In the broader continuum of longevity care, pelvic health stands as one of the most underrecognized yet powerful tools for sustaining independence across the lifespan.
























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