Burning

Burning

Intimate burning sensations: what they reveal and how to support the balance of your mucosa.

Understanding intimate burning

A burning sensation can be external (vulva), internal (vagina) or happen when you urinate. That last point matters: burning while urinating points more towards cystitis, whereas external burning suggests the skin and lining.

The most common causes:

  • Infections: yeast, BV, cystitis, sometimes an STI.
  • Dryness and atrophy (menopause, post-partum) that thin the lining.
  • Contact dermatitis: soaps, gels, wipes, scented pads.
  • Vulvodynia: chronic pain/burning with no infectious cause, worth assessing.
Where?
external, internal or on urination: location points to the cause
Infections
yeast, BV and cystitis are among the most common causes
↓ estrogen
menopausal dryness often causes burning
Paladine & Desai, 2018, Am Fam Physician, Vaginitis: Diagnosis and Treatment.

Why it burns

The intimate lining is protected by a flora of lactobacilli and an acidic pH. When the barrier is weakened (infection, dryness, irritant), inflammation exposes the nerve endings: the slightest friction or urine triggers burning.

After menopause, falling estrogen thins the lining and amplifies these sensations (genitourinary syndrome of menopause). Over-washing and scented products always make it worse.

pH
an unbalanced pH weakens the barrier and favours burning
Barrier
a repaired, hydrated lining calms the inflammation
Gentleness
removing soaps and friction lets the lining recover
NAMS, 2020, Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause Position Statement.

“Intimate burning should never be brushed off: it tells you a barrier is suffering. Look first for infection or dryness, remove irritants, hydrate. If burning persists with no cause found, think of vulvodynia and refer for specialist care.”

Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause (NAMS, 2020)

What to do day to day

Calm the inflammation and repair the barrier.

1. Spot the context

Burning on urination → think cystitis (see a doctor); external burning after a product → dermatitis; dryness → atrophy. Context guides.

2. Very gentle hygiene

Lukewarm water or a physiological-pH product, no scented soap or wipes. Avoid anything that stings or perfumes.

3. Hydrate the lining

A regular intimate moisturiser repairs the lining and reduces the burning effect, especially with dryness.

4. Reduce friction

Cotton underwear, loose clothing, lubricant during sex: less friction, less burning.

5. Support the flora

A targeted botanical care helps restore a protective acidic pH and soothe the lining.

What to expect

An indicative guide: every body responds at its own pace.

Days 1-3

Remove the aggressor

Stopping soaps and irritants lets the burning stop intensifying.

Days 3-7

Relief

With hydration, the lining repairs and the burning recedes.

2-3 weeks

Comfort restored

Supported flora and a hydrated lining: the barrier becomes resilient again.

If it persists

See a doctor

Burning on urination, fever, or burning with no cause found: medical advice is needed.

Why act, and when to see a doctor

Most burning settles; some signals an infection that needs treatment.

Comfort

Calm the burning

A soothed lining, day to day and during sex.

Prevention

Protect the barrier

A hydrated lining and a protective pH reduce the risk of recurrent burning.

Intimacy

Enjoy sex again

Treating burning helps prevent pain during sex.

Caution

When to see a doctor

See a doctor for burning on urination, fever, lower-abdomen or back pain, or burning that persists with no obvious cause.

Your questions about intimate burning

  • Often, yes: burning on urination with frequent urges suggests cystitis, which usually needs medical advice and sometimes an antibiotic. External burning, by contrast, comes more from the skin or lining.

  • Falling estrogen thins and dries the lining (genitourinary syndrome of menopause), which becomes more sensitive. Hydrating the lining helps markedly.

  • Yes. Scented soaps, shower gels and wipes strip the barrier and cause contact burning. Switch to gentle, fragrance-free cleansing.

  • Chronic burning with no infection or dryness may be vulvodynia. Specialist care (gynaecologist, pelvic-floor physiotherapy) is then helpful.

  • See a doctor for burning on urination, fever, lower-back pain, or burning that persists despite care (vaginitis guidance, AFP 2018).

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