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Abdominal Separation or Diastasis Recti: Exercises to Do & Avoid

After giving birth, many moms are left with an abdominal pooch or bulge for months or years.  This is sometimes due to some extra weight that isn’t lost postpartum, but it may also be due to the condition known as Diastasis Recti Abdominis (DRA) which many women don’t even know is a condition. 

In medical terms, a DRA is a separation between the two bellies of the rectus abdominis at the Linea Alba and this condition may occur in more than half of all pregnancies. 

Do I have Diastasis Recti?

To check to see if you have diastasis recti, first, lie on your back with your knees bent and feet flat on the floor. Then place your fingers with the palm facing you on your belly button. Lift your head and neck just slightly off of the floor like you are doing a crunch while you press down with your fingers. If there is a gap this would mean you have a diastasis.  You should conduct the test just above your belly button and just below the button since the gap can measure differently in these places. 

Best Diastasis Recti Exercises

Diaphragmatic breathing

The first step to any diastasis recti workout is learning to breathe properly. To practice diaphragmatic breathing, lie down on your back. Our bodies naturally fall into this breath pattern when we’re sleeping, so moving into a position associated with rest can serve as a trigger to move into a deeper diaphragmatic breath pattern.

Supine marches

Heel slides

Diastasis recti exercises that focus on releasing tension in the back and hip flexors while activating the pelvic floor and core are excellent for refinding your neutral alignment and coordinating the muscles of your inner core unit.

As you do this exercise, see if you can initiate the movement from your core rather than moving your spine, bones of the pelvis, or gripping the hip flexors.

Leg lifts

This diastasis recti exercise promotes the proper use of your core so your body can begin memorizing what it feels like to use correct core mechanics when increasing the load (i.e., your leg).

Toe taps

Lifting the leg to a 90-degree position challenges the core to stay engaged (not pushing out). Just holding the leg in that lifted position is work when you have diastasis recti. Once you feel strong, you can advance to increasing the load even more with these toe taps.

Quadruped paper slides and reaches

Diagonal exercises train the cross-body muscle fibers of the internal and external obliques.

Movements that properly activate the core while training these cross-body fibers help speed up your diastasis recti recovery by training the muscles of your entire core to work together, not just the ones that have sustained the injury.

As your core stability becomes stronger, you can advance to sliding your hand and foot away from your body along the floor on your exhale activation.

Note: Progress to this exercise when you can properly control the activation of your Core Breathing Belly Pump while lying down. If you can’t maintain core support, practice keeping three points on the ground and only lifting one limb at a time instead of two.

Diastasis Recti: Exercises to Avoid

Many exercises that are thought to promote core strengthening need to be avoided. Performing exercises like planks and crunches can actually make the condition worse. In general, specialists advise against movements such as planks, traditional sit-ups, push-ups and backbends, Yoga postures that stretch the abdominal muscles, and other abdominal exercises that flex the upper spine off the floor because of the intense core pressure and abdominal doming they produce. As a rule, if you have diastasis recti, exercises that cause uncontrolled doming or coning should be avoided. Once you establish proper core engagement and strength, you may be able to resume these exercises safely and complete your workouts without limitations.  Avoid lifting and carrying very heavy objects.  

Don’t perform exercises in quadruped (on your hands and knees) without adequate abdominal support and try to avoid intense coughing without abdominal support.

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