Sonoma Clinic’s New MedSpa Brings ‘Emsella’ Pelvic Health Chair to Town

3 min read
Sonoma Clinic's New MedSpa Brings 'Emsella' Pelvic Health Chair to Town

This article was written by the Augury Times






A new Allegro MedSpa opens in Sonoma County with a focus on pelvic health

A new clinic under the Allegro MedSpa & Plastic Surgery Associates name opened in Sonoma County on December 10, 2025, adding a non‑invasive pelvic health treatment to local care options. The facility, announced by Cosmetic Physician Partners, starts with a clean, clinic-style layout and aims to offer cosmetic and functional services for adults who want to address pelvic floor weakness without surgery. The headline feature is the Emsella chair, a device that uses focused electromagnetic pulses to strengthen pelvic floor muscles while patients sit fully clothed.

The opening adds another option for people in and around Sonoma County who have long waited for accessible treatments for urinary leakage, postpartum muscle loss, and some sexual health concerns. Staff at the new location say the treatment is quick to schedule and requires no downtime, which could make it appealing to working adults and parents. The clinic will also offer more familiar cosmetic services and follow standard medical intake procedures before starting any therapy.

Who Allegro MedSpa & Plastic Surgery Associates is and the team running the new site

Allegro MedSpa & Plastic Surgery Associates is presented as a full-service practice that combines aesthetic services with reconstructive and functional care. The brand is now operating under the management of Cosmetic Physician Partners, a company that works with many local clinics to expand service access. At the new Sonoma location, the medical team includes board-certified surgeons and licensed nurse practitioners who focus on both surgical and non-surgical options. The practice emphasizes personalized plans and says it will merge cosmetic offerings like injectables and skin treatments with functional services such as pelvic health therapies.

Emsella treatment explained in everyday terms

Emsella is a chair‑style device designed to stimulate and train the pelvic floor through high‑intensity, focused electromagnetic energy. Patients sit fully clothed on the chair during a session. The machine delivers pulses that cause the pelvic floor muscles to contract, which mimics the effect of doing thousands of Kegel exercises in a short time. The idea is to rebuild muscle strength and improve control over bladder function.

The treatment is aimed mostly at adults who have mild to moderate urinary leakage after childbirth, with age, or from other causes that weaken the pelvic floor. It is also used by some patients who want to improve core and pelvic strength for sexual function. Typical programs involve a series of short sessions spread over a few weeks. Results vary: some patients report measurable improvement within weeks, while others need maintenance sessions to keep gains.

Who might try Emsella and what a visit looks like

The new clinic screens patients before offering Emsella. Candidates are usually adults with stress or mixed urinary incontinence, recent postpartum weakness, or pelvic floor weakness tied to aging. People with certain implanted devices, metal in the pelvic area, or specific medical conditions may not be eligible.

A typical Emsella visit lasts about 20 to 30 minutes. Patients sit on the chair and may feel a tapping or pulsing sensation as muscles contract. There is no recovery time, and most people return to normal activities right away. Mild muscle soreness or fatigue for a day or two is the most commonly reported side effect.

How the new facility serves the local community

Located in Sonoma County, the new Allegro MedSpa aims to be accessible to nearby towns and suburbs. The clinic reports regular weekday hours with limited weekend appointments. Booking is available by phone or through an online form, and the practice says it will accept a mix of private payments and some insurance for qualifying functional treatments.

Regulatory and credential notes on safety

Emsella is cleared by U.S. regulators for treating urinary incontinence in adults. The equipment is offered alongside care by credentialed staff: licensed practitioners, nurses, and board‑certified surgeons oversee treatments and patient evaluations. The clinic follows standard medical intake and consent procedures before beginning any treatment.

Photo: Tima Miroshnichenko / Pexels

Sources

Comments

Be the first to comment.
Loading…

Add a comment

Log in to set your Username.

More from Augury Times

Augury Times