Pages

Sunday, August 7, 2011

When and How to Exercise Post a 'C' Section


It is crucial following a 'C' section that you allow your body to not only recovery from your pregnancy but also from abdominal surgery.

You have just had major surgery and depending on how your baby was delivered will affect your recovery.

If you elected or had to have an elected ‘C ‘ section your body has possibly not gone in to labour naturally so it can be a little harder preparing mentally for this and your body and baby may not be ready on the selected date of surgery.


If you have gone in to labour and then had to have and emergency C section your body responds better post as it had gone into labour naturally, you and your baby were ready. Your brain and body had registered that pregnancy was ending.

In the days that follow a ' C' you can be in minimal to quite a lot of pain. You need to take pain killers during the first 1-10 days.
You should not have increasing pain from  4-5 days post you should at this stage be able to get out of bed carefully and move around a little easier. This is normally when you are allowed to go home.

If you exercised during your pregnancy you are now at a huge advantage you will recover quicker and up to 80% quicker than women who didn't exercise during pregnancy.

To protect your tender areas you can use your upper body and leg strength to lift you up out of bed or a chair avoiding stretching the area where your stitches are.

The first exercise to do to promote recovery when you have minimal pain is to have a look at your tummy muscles and see if you can activate your transverse abdominal muscles this is a very simple activation exercise.

See if you can pull your belly button in towards your spine activating your T.V.A-transverse abdominal muscle and rectus abdominal, just gently, no quick and fast pull ins. Just see if you can do it slowly. Avoid trying to contract all the way in, just a little is all you need to do. You should feel no pain. You should not be activating any other muscle or tilting your pelvis underneath you.

If you do feel pain try the activation exercise 1-2 days later.
For more information on how to connect with your T.V.A muscles post birth go to http://positivelypregnant-mummytrainer.blogspot.co.nz/2012/07/how-to-activate-transverse-abdominal.html on this site


Try to do this early activation exercise each time you lift your baby up, when you change and carry them.

From 2-3 weeks post you should try to activate your tummy muscles as often as you can.
You should not feel any pain. At this stage you are ready to start a Post Natal Corrective exercise Program. Have a look at the very popular Birth2FitMum program that I sell on my website http://pregnancyexercise.co.nz 

Can I go for a Walk?
You may feel you are ready for a walk from days 10-14 post depending on the exercise you did prior to birth if you are still sore it may take another 7-10 days before you feel like steping out. It may even take another 4 weeks if you are unfit from lack of exercise or bed rest prior to giving birth.

Walking Post ‘C’ Section
Start with a small 10-15 minute walk by yourself, don't go with baby in the buggy just yet! Pushing baby in a buggy can add too much stress too soon to the delicate area as you need to try to control the buggy with your muscles especially going downhill. You can add the buggy from 4-5 weeks and starting off with a flat route can be best. 

This is a walking program that you can follow post:
Walk by yourself from day 12-21

Start with 10-15 minutes. If you feel ANY pain stop, try again in 2-3 days. If you have no pain you can repeat 48 hours later. Repeat the same walk time 3 times, each time leaving 48 hours between. If after the 3x 10-15 minute walks there is no pain you can increase your time by 5 minutes and then repeat the program.
Now you can walk 15 minutes every other day, do this 3 times. Again adding 5 minutes after every 3 walks of the same time.
Do this until you are walking 3-4 times a week for 45 minutes with no pain.

This walking program is just walking. It is not exercise and there is minimal effort required it is just a WALK.


Once you can walk pain free for 30 minutes 3-4 times a week you can try to push your baby in a buggy. If you are less than 8 weeks post take it easy and try to stay on the flat. It is a good idea if you can go with a friend so they can take over on the up and down-hills. It is hard to push your baby up-hill as this puts a huge strain on your core muscles and down-hill is just as hard as you have to try to stabilize your buggy with weak muscles. Try to avoid.

After 8 weeks you can increase your walking pace and intensity, don’t go out and walk fast for 45 minutes, you need to build slowly. Try 10 minutes at 70-75% Intensity -aerobic intensity exercise, you know you are exercising but you are not pushing yourself too hard- If this feels ok and you experience no pain try 20 minutes fast on your next walk and then try 30 minutes the following week.
You don’t need to walk hard on every walk, try to do 3 walks a week when you walk faster and at a higher intensity.

Remember everyone is different and recovers at different levels, if you are following my Birth2fitmum program you may feel like you can do more especially if you are sleeping! Listen to your body and use this as your guide, just like you did during your pregnancy

Strength Exercise over Cardio Post C section?
Your strength and rehabilitation exercises are more important than your cardio fitness post birth but its nice to be able to get out of the house and be pain free.

You should do a specific strengthening exercise program 3-4 times a week post a C section starting from 7-14 days post. If you can do this you would be back to full core strength within 14-20 weeks depending on when you started your abdominal separation and core strength. Test your post pregnancy abdominal muscle separation-diastasis recti here.http://positivelypregnant-mummytrainer.blogspot.co.nz/2012/06/diastasis-recti-self-test-post.html

A good program will decrease abdominal separation, increase core and glute strength and focus on postural muscle strengthening exercises.

The benefit of not pushing your baby out is that your pelvic floor muscles are probably ok! You still need to do your pelvic floor muscle exercises post birth as they help to activate your TVA's!

Please feel free to comment and ask further questions. This is just a short guide.

If you want to purchase your own specific and safe post pregnancy 12 week program please contact me for a FREE 2 week Trial Lorraine@pregnancyexercise.co.nz
Remember the golden rule. You need to check with your G.P or LMC before starting any exercise program.

5 comments:

  1. That is a relatively pessimistic view...I had a C-section myself, could walk after a week for at least 40 minutes with or without stroller (and was encouraged to do at the hospital), was back to easy running at 3 weeks pp and resumed my normal routine at about 5 weeks pp - totally pain- free. It is different for every woman but walking can and should be resumed very soon and speeds up recovery!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Not sure if the view is pessimistic... I think the concern about rushing exercise after a C-section is that the incision can tear and cause inflammation. Having had two C-sections, I would not do any exercise beyond walking for the first 5-8 week.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi There it is absolutely crucial women who have had a c section activate their TVa and PFM within 2-3 weeks and then activate rectus abdominal and obliques after 3-4 weeks moving forward activating glute max and med.
    Many women start my Birth2fitmum program 2-4 weeks post a C section as this is what many physio's recommend and suggest-remember it is re-hab exercise not jumping back in to strenuous exercise. This type of exercise is lot less strenuous than walking and is much more beneficial and pairs very well with walking. It is these activation exercises that are taught to women in many birthing centres.
    The type of exercise I refer to in this blog help speed up a woman's recovery and help to stabilize her pelvis and decrease her diastasis recti-abdominal muscle separation. If left longer it is much harder to activate these muscles correctly. These exercises will certainly not increase any tearing like I say they are less demanding on the post natal body than what walking is. Lorraine

    ReplyDelete
  4. Fastidious response in return of this matter with real arguments and explaining everything regarding that.


    Also visit my web blog; Lean Muscle Formula Reviews

    ReplyDelete
  5. Walking is one of the easiest post C-section exercises you can do. It prevents blood clots and promotes the healing process. Your metabolism will increase and it will help burn fat from your entire body.When you first start doing abdominal exercises after your C-section, take it easy and avoid putting to much strain on your abdominals. Before doing intense crunches and sit-ups, strengthen your abdominals with easier exercises such as the leg slide.


    ReplyDelete