Exercise After C-Section
When you have a c-section, a horizontal incision is made with a
scalpel, just above the pubic bone where the pubic hair begins, through five
layers of skin, tissue, and muscle:
1) the derma, or outer layer of skin and 2) fat; 3) the fascia,
the tough, thin layer that supports the muscle; 4) the rectus muscle, which is
manually separated by the surgeon’s fingers down to the pubic bone; and 5) the
peritoneum, a shiny layer that encases the entire abdominal cavity. The rectus
muscles are parted to gain access to the uterus and your baby.
A ‘bikini line’ transverse (side to side) cut is the more common
type of cut, as this results in less scarring and chance of infection or
complications. A vertical cut is usually now used only in emergency situations
and can be slower to heal, with more scarring.
In neither incision are the abdominal muscles cut. The two strips
of rectus muscle are manually further separated at the midline to gain access.
This is important – your muscles have not been cut!
WHAT
DOES THAT MEAN FOR YOUR TUMMY?
Layers of tissue are cut, and then sewn back together, which
creates scarring through multiple levels of tissue of your abdominal wall. This
scarring affects the muscles’ ability to glide over the top of each other
during muscle contraction. The result is weakness and a lack of stabilization.
If you have had more than one c-section, with a gap of less than
two years in between, then your abdomen may not have repaired completely before
your body went through the whole process of pregnancy and surgery again. Your
recovery and ability to regain physiological balance is related to hormones,
body weight, posture and alignment, and muscle tone.
Starting with stronger abdominal muscles will help with
recovery,  and strengthening the deep muscles of your core and pelvic
floor during pregnancy will give you the “muscle memory” to make it easier to
do the exercises after the birth.
But if you’re reading this and your stomach muscles can’t
remember last Tuesday, let alone how to synchronise with your pelvic floor,
don’t worry!
EXERCISE
AFTER C-SECTION | 0-6 WEEKS POST C-SECTION: JUST FINDTHE MUSCLES
Start as soon as you can. You’re not ‘exercising’, you’re
breathing and re-connecting your brain to your tummy and your pelvic floor. And
the sooner you do this after any type of birth, the better.
MUTU System has a holistic philosophy which deals with
posture, functional exercise (i.e. metabolic resistance exercise techniques
that make you truly strong, lean and ‘fit for purpose’), optimal nutrition
for health, hormone balance and energy, specific techniques to help re-settle
the pelvic organs, tone and heal the deep muscles as well as relieve stress and
promote optimal respiration… AND at the foundation of it all,
a complete 4-Phase program to train (find) and then strengthen the muscles of
your core.
You need your core if you want to stand up, sit, move, twist,
pull, push, bend or turn. Kinda important. It’s connected (literally) to the
muscles of your pelvic floor, which you need to prevent you from wetting yourself
or having a prolapse. Kinda important too. You need strong core muscles to help
close a diastasis recti, or
separation of your abdominal muscles. And if you want a flatter tummy after
having babies, you need all of the above in spades.
After a Cesarean section, you will experience numbness around
your scar site, and so the the visualisation of ‘gently drawing belly button to
spine’ may be unhelpful as you may not be able to feel this movement.
Instead imagine your abdomen as a clock, with your belly button
at 12 o’clock, your pubic bone at 6 o’clock, and your hip bones as 3 and 6.
Imagine you are slowly and gently drawing the hip bones, or 3 and 6 o’clock,
together. It will also work if you imagine you are drawing them apart! Don’t
worry that you can’t feel much happening for now. Go gently and do the movement
on a long, slow exhale.
At the same time, engage your pelvic floor muscles. Not a little
squeeze at the front, a deep, high lift in the middle. MUTU System teaches you how.
Get as used to this movement as you can. Practice as you sit in
bed recovering, and as you feed your baby – just take long slow breaths in time
with the muscle contractions. When you move around – roll out of bed (always
from your side!) when you start to try lifting things, when you do anything
that is going to place forward forceful pressure on your scar site… engage the
muscles.
Don’t try to get up from lying on your back – always roll to your
side first. And  don’t – under any circumstances, not now or in the future
– do sit ups or crunches.
If you have had one or more Cesarean births, or other abdominal
surgery, then there may also be scar tissue or adhesions exacerbating your
mummy tummy. Massage (just rub the skin gently between your fingers around the
scar) will help to break down scar tissue, encourage oxygen flow in, and toxin
flow out of, the area which will aid healing.
Whilst muscles have not been cut, ligaments and fascia have
been, and this all takes time to heal. The more you can ‘connect with’ and use
your deep core muscles, the quicker recovery will be. Scar tissue and adhesions
can cause a tummy overhang, and body fat may appear to be unevenly distributed
around your middle. Stress, lack of sleep and a lack of sensation or confidence
with your stomach (factors all common to most new mums!) will make this worse.
So, in the early days, massage, mobilize, find and strengthen
your deep muscles, eat clean fresh food to recover and nourish your body, try
to get plenty of sleep and love your body a little. The will help you heal,
restore and strengthen your abdominal muscles.



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