Abdominal Separation (Diastasis Recti)

Known as diastasis recti or separated abs, this is a common occurrence and often appears in the second trimester of pregnancy.

As the baby grows, so does the chance of you developing separated abs. Generally, this is no problem, as the female body is designed to foster and birth babies.

How to know if you have a separation

DEEP CORE

First, it really helps to understand what your abdominal muscles look like. Did you know the deepest layer actually looks a lot like a corset? It’s quite amazing how well designed and tightly laced up our core is! So, the deepest layer, our transversus abdominis (or TA for short), comes from the back, wraps around your waist and inserts at the front – along your midline. If you can visualise a thin corset wrapping around your midsection, you’ve pretty much got the TA down pat.

What you also need to know about the TA is that it’s a stabilising muscle – different from the muscle we use for your standard sit-ups taught in a gym class.

Drawing up gently on the pelvic floor, like in Kegel exercises or the feeling of trying to draw a tampon up also helps engage the TA.

2nd and 3rd LAYER OF ABS – twists, stabilisation and movement

Over the TA, the inner and outer obliques sit. These muscles are a little bit more like ropes starting roundabout your ribcage and, while also sometimes assisting to stabilise your core, help in twisting movements and when you do unilateral (single side) work.

A lot of people can feel them when they place their hands near the base of their ribs and exhale. As the lungs deflate, the obliques assist in drawing the ribcage down and shorten and tighten.

OUR SIXPACK

On top of all of those layers is the abdominal muscles also known as our rectus abdominis (the sixpack muscle). This one helps you move and bend over and is often a bit easier to engage as it’s such a strong and overpowering muscle.

Using this one feels like you’re shouting with your abs as they burn when given a good workout. Unfortunately, using it without knowing how to engage and strengthen the underlying layers also means you’re doing more damage if you have separated abs.

Sixpack muscle workouts are best avoided to start with as basic everyday movements recruits it, such as bending forwards, lying down from a seated position without rolling over your side, sports in a forward bend position like rowing, cycling etc and these activities will start to rebuild your abdominal muscles safely and naturally without over stressing them too early post pregnancy.

DON’T

This is really important to understand, as a lot of women think strengthening their abs/ core is just strengthening the most superficial layer of abs! The result: more separation as the two sides pull apart more and create a bigger gap and bulge along the midline of your body. This is why doing sit-ups until the cows come home would be a terrible idea. It could make your rectus abdominus bulge or separate even more; which is why you should avoid crunches and standard Pilates 100′s.

We need to start from the inside out, so to speak. Hence why the pelvic floor is important too – to help you engage and strengthen your transversus abdominis.

DO YOU HAVE SEPARATED ABS?

Generally, your chances of having diastasis recti are higher if you have been pregnant several times, as the muscles stretch every time and become a little like a stretched rubber band that develops cracks more easily.

Also, if you don’t exercise at all during pregnancy, you’re statistically more likely to develop the condition – and it’s likely to be more pronounced. Another good incentive to keep up exercise!

WHAT TO DO

Whatever you do, think inside out and slow and steady. Stabilising muscles need strengthening first and your body will bounce back more than you think if you just give it time and gentle care. Self love and care is important.

Gentle pelvic floor and core strengthening exercises will be great for you.

Walking is fantastic as it helps you get your blood pumping, is easily done with a baby or toddler and it starts to build your fitness base in a safe way.

Other exercises like cycling, swimming and the like are unfortunately best avoided right at the onset of separated abs – depending on how severe the separation is, of course.

And as such our advice is not to do any specific ab work until you can get the ok from a physio as you can make your separation worse by doing too much too soon and it is always best to have that physio give you advice on what exercise you can do so that they determine what your ability is.’