For Lasting Therapeutic Success: The PelvicTool is an Ideal Training Device to Support Pelvic Floor Rehabilitation.
Smart pelvic floor training device for combined training in physiotherapy and at home.
„I like to use the PelvicTool Home & Sport as an adjunct to specialised pelvic floor physiotherapy. The playful approach motivates patients and provides a welcome change to the daily therapy routine.“
Supervised pelvic floor training in pelvic floor physiotherapy
Medical science agrees that targeted pelvic floor muscle training is the first choice in the treatment of incontinence, bladder weakness, erectile dysfunction, urinary incontinence and after prostate surgery.
Therapeutic support is extremely important for people with pelvic floor disorders. Professional pelvic floor rehabilitation, combined with independent, regular exercise, can often successfully treat the condition. During therapy, patients first learn how to take pressure off the pelvic floor in everyday activities, such as lifting and carrying. After a thorough medical history, the therapist will work with you on specific exercises to identify, strengthen and relax the pelvic floor muscles.
Patients can find specialised pelvic floor physiotherapists in the therapist directory of national associations (Switzerland: pelvisuisse, the Swiss Society for Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy).

Biofeedback: Ideal for perception training and progress monitoring
Many patients do not know where the pelvic floor is, or that it is crucial for urine control, male erectile function and much more. They may not even feel it properly and are therefore unable to train the muscles by contracting and relaxing them. This is understandable: the muscles are hidden in the body and we cannot see them directly. It is therefore difficult to judge from the outside whether pelvic floor exercises are being done correctly and effectively.
Biofeedback technology has been shown to be ideal for pelvic floor training, as neuromuscular stimulation often improves muscle control in a relatively short time.

The PelvicTool Home & Sport, which works with biofeedback, consists of an ergonomically shaped seat cushion with a soft sensor tube and the training app. Training with the PelvicTool is very simple: the seat cushion with the tube is placed on a flat stool and the patient sits on it wearing light training clothes. The PelvicTool app is then started on the mobile phone or tablet and the desired exercise is selected. The sensor tube sends the contraction values via Bluetooth to the mobile phone or tablet, where they are displayed graphically.
This allows the patient to check that they are exercising the right muscles in real time on their smartphone or tablet during the therapy session. Individual training programme settings are possible as well as guided or free trainings.
Trade fairs and symposiums
Come and see the PelvicTool at one of the following trade fairs:
FIBO, Köln, 10.-14.4.2025 (Aussteller PonteMed)
Therapie Leipzig, 8.-10.5.2025 (Aussteller BeBo®, Aussteller Sport-Tec)
Deutscher Hebammenkongress, Münster, 5.-7.5.2025 (Aussteller BeBo®)
Â
The ideal addition to pelvic floor physiotherapy: PelvicTool
Simple and effective pelvic floor training.

Long-lasting therapeutic success through consistent muscle training
To ensure the long-term success of therapy, it is important that the patient continues to minimise the strain on the pelvic floor in everyday life and to regularly train the pelvic floor. As the pelvic floor muscles, like all other muscles, become progressively weaker with age, continuous training is essential to maintain the newly gained quality of life.

Easily integrable into daily life
The PelvicTool Home & Sport is ideal for working with patients in pelvic floor physiotherapy. Since no sensor needs to be inserted into the body, it requires little effort or hesitation from patients. For this reason, the device is also frequently used in everyday practice with minimal effort, even for shorter training sessions.
Thanks to its ease of use, the Alonea PelvicTool is also very well-suited for lending to patients: It is simple to operate and motivates patients through short, varied training sessions with progress tracking for independent training.
«Our aim is to make patients aware of how to train and use their pelvic floor muscles in everyday life, and then to empower them to be independent.»
„Although I lost the feeling in my pelvic floor muscles after an open radical prostatectomy (RPE), I learned to control my pelvic floor muscles and reduce my incontinence symptoms with the help of the PelvicTool. Seeing the progress on the app motivated me to continue.“
Can I test the PelvicTool before buying?
If you’d like to try the PelvicTool Home & Sport before purchasing, we recommend a monthly rental from Parsenn-Produkte AG (Switzerland) or Beckenboden-Gesundheit.com (Germany).
The innovative PelvicTool technology has been successfully used for years in pelvic floor physiotherapy, postpartum recovery courses, and renowned fitness centers like Kieser Training. It is recommended and distributed by expert partners such as Sport-Tec, Frei Medical, Heuser Excio, Parsenn Produkte AG, and Bebo®.
FAQs
Training with the PelvicTool Home & Sport
Pelvic floor training with the PelvicTool Home & Sport is easy and fun! It is important to position the device correctly and to perform the exercises in a straight, calm position. You can train in light clothing on the PelvicTool Home & Sport. We recommend wearing thin, comfortable training trousers.
You might be interested in these articles:
Urinary incontinence: bladder weakness what to do
What is urinary incontinence? How common is bladder weakness? What are the different forms of urinary incontinence? How can pelvic floor training help with urinary incontinence?
NEW: PelvicTool pelvic floor training device for rent
Would you like to test the PelvicTool Home & Sport pelvic floor training device before you buy it? Some of our sales partners now also offer a rental service in addition to sales.
Pelvic floor training for prostate issues?
Pelvic floor exercises have proven to be helpful for prostate problems. Behind the “man’s disease” is the proliferating prostate gland, which hinders urination and causes urinary incontinence. Surgery for prostatic hyperplasia or prostate cancer further aggravates the symptoms.
Incontinence during sports: What to do?
Sport is indispensable for a healthy lifestyle – but the fact that it can cause incontinence is considered a taboo subject. Not only women and older people are affected by this, young athletes of both sexes have to struggle with it as well. Urinary incontinence, in particular, occurs with many sports.
Stay up to date
Subscribe to our newsletter here and receive valuable tips for pelvic floor training. Free of charge and can be cancelled at any time.