Can Exercise Help Period Pain? What Research Says About Dysmenorrhea
Period pain is common.
For some women, it means a few uncomfortable days each month. For others, it is severe enough to disrupt work, sleep, exercise, and daily life.
Primary dysmenorrhea — menstrual pain without an underlying condition such as endometriosis or fibroids — is one of the most common menstrual health complaints. ⁴
An important question researchers have increasingly explored is whether exercise can help reduce menstrual pain.
The short answer is: it may — but not all exercise is the same.
Just as you would not choose swimming as your primary training if your goal were to run a marathon, different forms of movement train different systems and produce different adaptations.
Some improve endurance. Others build strength, mobility, flexibility, or sport-specific performance.
So when we ask whether exercise can help period pain, an important follow-up question is not only whether movement helps — but also what kind of movement may help most.