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Postpartum Surgery Decisions

Published 2 weeks ago
Description

You’re cleared for pelvic surgery and then someone hands you a rule that says you can’t lift more than 10 pounds. Meanwhile, your toddler weighs three times that and your life doesn’t come with a pause button. We’re talking about the gap between real postpartum life and the way recovery advice is often delivered, and what the research actually says about returning to activity.

We walk through common postpartum surgeries and why the “right” option depends on symptoms, goals, and context: midurethral sling procedures for urinary incontinence, prolapse repairs like sacrocolpopexy, and abdominal surgery such as abdominoplasty for diastasis recti. I share how I think about conservative management first, why I’m not anti-surgery, and how pelvic floor physical therapy and prehab can support you before and after an operation. We also dig into what rehab can genuinely improve (strength, coordination, function) and what it cannot promise (a specific look at rest), especially when genetics and connective tissue play a role.

Then we get into the spicy part: post-op lifting restrictions. We unpack why “strain” is relative, why blanket limits are rarely evidence-based, and how studies comparing strict vs liberal return-to-activity protocols show that gradual progression can be safe and can reduce symptom burden faster. If you’re considering postpartum surgery or recovering now, this will help you ask better questions, advocate for individualized guidance, and protect your quality of life.

Subscribe for more evidence-informed pelvic health conversations, share this with a friend navigating recovery, and leave a review telling us what return-to-exercise question you want answered next.

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