Returning to exercise after a C-section
July 3rd, 2020
Comments Off on Returning to exercise after a C-section
Whether you had an elective or emergency C-section, you should know a couple of things before starting to exercise again. It is major abdominal surgery, and proper recovery is necessary. Meli Comaschi-Cordoba explains what you need to know.

Whether you had an elective or emergency C-section, you should know a couple of things before starting to exercise again.
Having a C-section is not the "easy way out"! It is major abdominal surgery, and proper recovery is necessary, just as with any other procedure of the same nature.
If you'd had shoulder or knee surgery, would you start living normally straight after it? I'm sure the answer is no. You would take plenty of time to rest and recover, and when the doctor advises it is safe, you can start with the rehabilitation.
Why is it different for C-sections? I know, the life of the new mum is super hard! Very little sleep, feeding every three hours, starting to know this little person while the rest of the world keeps moving... Just writing about it makes me tired!
There is one thing you can't delegate to others: breastfeeding. For the rest of it, ask for help. You should be resting as much as possible after the operation. So, bottle-feeding the baby, bathing, cooking, tidying up around the house and help with older children are some of the tasks that can be done by your partner and other people from your support system.
Did you know that there are 7 layers of tissue to access the baby?
- Skin cut
- Fat cut
- Connective tissue, tough and fibrous (Fascia) cut
- Abdominal muscles are spread apart
- Peritoneum (supportive layer) cut
- The bladder is moved out of the way to access the uterus
- Uterus cut
- Heavy weights
- Pressure on your pelvic floor muscles
- Planks
- Running
- Crunches
- Jumping
Comments Off on Returning to exercise after a C-section