Vestibulodynia Symptoms and Diagnosis
The most common form of vestibulodynia is provoked vestibulodynia (PVD) — pain at the vulvar vestibule (the tissue at the vaginal entrance) that occurs specifically with contact, like tampons, intercourse, or a pelvic exam. Most women with PVD feel fine until the vestibule is touched, and they typically don’t have pain deep in the vagina. PVD can be primary (pain from the very first attempt at penetration) or secondary (pain that develops months or years after a history of pain-free penetration). At Maze Health, diagnosis goes beyond naming PVD; we work to identify the type and likely driver of vestibulodynia because treatment depends on whether the cause is hormonal, nerve-related, pelvic floor tension, allergic/inflammatory, or another contributing factor.
Vestibulodynia is most often “provoked,” which means the pain has a trigger. In provoked vestibulodynia (PVD), the vestibule hurts when it’s touched — a tampon, intercourse, fingers, tight pressure at the opening, or even an exam — but outside of contact, many patients have little or no pain. A key clue is that the pain is usually at the entrance, not deep inside the vagina. That pattern matters, because it points the evaluation toward what’s happening in the vestibular tissue and the surrounding pelvic floor, rather than treating it as generalized pelvic pain.
PVD can be present in two timelines, and the timeline is diagnostic. Primary PVD is pain that shows up from the very first attempt at penetration (first tampon, first attempt at intercourse). Secondary PVD is more common and develops later, after months or years of comfortable penetration. This distinction helps narrow likely causes and helps set expectations for what treatment will target.
Maze’s diagnostic approach is focused on identifying the driver, not just the label. There are many possible contributors to PVD, and the most effective treatment plan depends on what is actually causing vestibular pain in your case. Four common patterns we look for are hormonal, nerve-related (congenital vs. acquired), and pelvic floor-driven pain.
Hormonally mediated vestibulodynia occurs when the vestibular tissue becomes sensitive due to a hormone imbalance or deficiency. This can be common with long-term birth control pill use, menopause, breastfeeding, or certain medications used for endometriosis or endometrial cancer. In these cases, the tissue itself becomes more fragile and reactive, which can make contact feel sharp, raw, or burning.
Congenital neuroproliferative vestibulodynia is driven by an increased number of nerve endings in the introitus (the vaginal entrance). Because women are born with this pattern, symptoms are typically present from the beginning, and it’s often first noticed with the first attempt at tampon use or intercourse. Patients with this type usually report they have never had pain-free penetration.
Acquired neuroproliferative vestibulodynia tends to develop after a significant inflammatory or allergic event; for example, a severe reaction to a topical medication or a severe yeast infection. Patients with very sensitive skin or a strong history of allergic reactions often fall into this category, and the “before vs. after” story can be a major clue.
Hypertonic pelvic floor vestibulodynia begins when pelvic floor muscles remain in a chronic state of high tension. That prolonged tightness can decrease blood flow and oxygen to the vestibular tissue, contributing to hypersensitivity at the entrance. In these cases, the vestibule is painful, but the engine behind it may be muscle tone and guarding that has been present for a long time.
And sometimes, multiple factors stack. Additional contributors can include genetic tendencies that make the vulva respond poorly to chronic inflammation, hypersensitivity to recurrent yeast infections, sexual trauma, and frequent antibiotic use. That’s why careful history matters so much: your timeline, triggers, and body’s patterns aren’t just details — they’re the roadmap to the right diagnosis and the right treatment.