
Key Takeaways
- Diastasis recti is a separation of the abdominal muscles caused by pregnancy that exercise alone may not be able to close, especially when the connective tissue (linea alba) has been permanently overstretched.
- Traditional core exercises like crunches can actually worsen the separation by increasing intra-abdominal pressure against weakened fascia.
- Surgical repair through muscle plication — often performed as part of a tummy tuck — is frequently the only way to restore true core function in moderate-to-severe cases.
- Dr. Michelle Hardaway, a board-certified plastic surgeon with over 20 years of experience, offers personalized diastasis recti repair at her QUAD A-accredited surgical center in Farmington Hills, MI.
Diastasis recti is a separation of the two parallel bands of abdominal muscle (the rectus abdominis) that occurs when the connective tissue between them — called the linea alba — is stretched beyond its capacity to recover. For many postpartum women, this separation does not close on its own, regardless of how consistently they exercise. When the gap is significant, surgical repair through a technique called muscle plication may be the most effective — and sometimes the only — path to restoring core strength and resolving the chronic back pain and abdominal weakness that come with it.
If you’ve been doing all the right things and still feel like your core is “broken,” this guide is for you.
What Is Diastasis Recti, and Why Does It Happen After Pregnancy?
Your abdominal wall is held together at the midline by the linea alba, a band of fibrous connective tissue running vertically from your sternum to your pubic bone. During pregnancy, the growing uterus places sustained outward pressure on this tissue. For most women, it stretches significantly — and for many, it does not fully rebound after delivery.
The result is a gap between the left and right sides of your rectus abdominis muscles. This isn’t just a cosmetic issue. The abdominal wall functions as the body’s internal corset, stabilizing the spine and pelvis with every movement you make. When that structural integrity is compromised, the effects ripple outward: chronic lower back pain, poor posture, pelvic floor dysfunction, and a persistent abdominal “pooch” that no amount of dieting or exercise seems to resolve.
How Do You Know If You Have It? A Simple At-Home Self-Test
You can perform a basic screening at home, though a definitive diagnosis should always come from a qualified medical professional.
Here’s how to do a simple self-check:
- Lie on your back with your knees bent and feet flat on the floor.
- Place your fingertips horizontally across your midline, just above your navel.
- Slowly lift your head and shoulders as if beginning a crunch.
- Feel for a soft gap or a “sinking” sensation under your fingers.
A separation of roughly two finger-widths or more may indicate diastasis recti. You may also notice a visible ridge or “coning” along your midline when you engage your core — a sign that the abdominal muscles are pushing outward through the gap rather than pulling inward as they should.
Common symptoms that often accompany the separation include:
- Persistent lower back pain or pelvic instability
- A visible abdominal bulge or “pooch” that doesn’t respond to exercise
- Feeling of core weakness during daily activities (lifting, climbing stairs)
- Urinary leakage or pelvic floor issues
- Poor posture or difficulty standing upright for extended periods
If several of these sound familiar, a professional evaluation is the appropriate next step.
Can Exercise Actually Fix Diastasis Recti?
This is one of the most important questions to answer honestly — and the answer is: it depends on severity, and there are real limits.
For mild cases (a small gap with intact fascial tension), a structured physical therapy program focused on deep core activation — particularly the transverse abdominis — may help reduce the separation over time. A qualified pelvic floor physical therapist can guide you through safe movements and help you avoid exercises that worsen the condition.
Here is where many women are let down by well-meaning but incomplete advice: certain common exercises can actively make diastasis recti worse. Traditional crunches, sit-ups, and heavy lifting that increase intra-abdominal pressure push outward force directly against already-weakened fascia. Rather than closing the gap, these movements can widen it.
More critically, exercise cannot rebuild connective tissue that has been permanently overstretched. The linea alba is not a muscle — it does not strengthen with training. Once it has lost its structural integrity beyond a certain threshold, no workout program can restore the mechanical support your core needs. This is not a failure of effort or discipline. It is a structural reality.
When Physical Therapy Isn’t Enough: Signs You May Need Surgery
If you’ve been consistent with physical therapy for six months or more and are still experiencing the symptoms above, it may be time to have an honest conversation with a board-certified plastic surgeon. Several clinical indicators suggest that surgical repair is likely the most appropriate path forward.
Consider a surgical consultation if you are experiencing:
- A gap of three or more finger-widths that has not responded to conservative treatment
- Persistent lower back pain or pelvic instability despite dedicated PT
- Visible “coning” or “doming” along the midline during any core engagement
- Significant abdominal laxity or skin excess alongside the muscular separation
- A meaningful decline in quality of life — difficulty with daily activities, exercise, or intimacy
It’s worth being direct: choosing surgery after months of failed conservative treatment is not “giving up.” It is making an informed, evidence-based decision about your own anatomy. The linea alba does not regenerate. For moderate-to-severe diastasis recti, surgical repair is not a cosmetic shortcut — it is a functional reconstruction.
How Diastasis Recti Repair Actually Works: Muscle Plication Explained
The surgical repair of diastasis recti is called muscle plication. During this procedure, the separated edges of the rectus abdominis muscles are drawn back together and secured with internal sutures, restoring the structural integrity of the abdominal wall. The linea alba is effectively reconstructed, creating a stable midline that supports the spine and pelvis as it was designed to do.
In many cases, diastasis recti repair is performed as part of a tummy tuck (abdominoplasty), which allows the surgeon to address excess skin and soft tissue at the same time. This combined approach is particularly common for postpartum patients, as pregnancy often produces both muscular separation and skin laxity that cannot be resolved through exercise alone.
Dr. Hardaway performs all surgical procedures at her on-site, QUAD A-accredited operating room in Farmington Hills, with a Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA) present for every procedure. This level of surgical infrastructure is not standard across all practices — it reflects a commitment to safety and clinical excellence that should be a primary consideration when evaluating any surgical provider.
Every repair is tailored specifically to each patient’s anatomy. There is no single “standard” application — the technique, suture placement, and scope of repair are determined by the degree of separation, tissue quality, and your individual functional goals.
What Does Recovery Look Like? A Week-by-Week Timeline
Recovery from diastasis recti repair — particularly when combined with a tummy tuck — requires dedicated planning. Here is a general framework, though your personalized recovery plan will be outlined in detail during your consultation. Individual timelines may vary.
Week 1–2: Rest and Wound Healing
Expect to spend the majority of this period resting. You will have a surgical drain in place for the first several days. Lifting restrictions are strict — nothing heavier than a few pounds. Arrange childcare support in advance, as you will not be able to lift your children during this phase.
Week 3–4: Gradual Mobility
Most patients transition from bed rest to light walking during this window. Swelling and tightness are normal and expected. You will still be in a compression garment, which supports the repair and reduces swelling.
Week 5–6: Return to Light Activity
Many patients with desk-based jobs are able to return to work during this period, though this varies. Light walking continues; no strenuous activity or core engagement.
Month 2–3: Progressive Core Reintroduction
With surgical clearance, you may begin a guided, gentle return to core strengthening — starting with low-impact, PT-supervised movements rather than gym-based exercise.
Month 4–6: Full Activity Resumption
Most patients are cleared for full physical activity by this point. The repaired abdominal wall continues to strengthen and settle, with final results typically visible at the six-month mark.
Ready to Restore Your Core? Schedule a Consultation in Farmington Hills
If you’ve done the work — the physical therapy, the targeted exercises, the lifestyle changes — and you’re still living with back pain, core weakness, and a body that doesn’t feel like yours, you deserve an honest, expert evaluation.
Dr. Michelle Hardaway is a board-certified plastic surgeon, Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, and former Chief of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at Detroit Receiving Hospital, with over 30 years of experience in abdominal wall reconstruction and customized mommy makeover procedures. Her practice in Farmington Hills offers a private, spa-like environment and a QUAD A accredited onsite surgical center — because the standard of care you receive matters as much as the outcome.
All consultations are paid and appointment-based to ensure you receive dedicated, uninterrupted time and a personalized treatment plan tailored specifically to your anatomy and goals.


What Social Media Gets Wrong About Liposuction Recovery — And Why Your Healing Body Is Right on Schedule