The Benefits of Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy for Pre- and Post-Surgery Care

The Benefits of Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy for Pre- and Post-Surgery Care explores targeted strategies for recovery. Discover new paths to mobility, healing, and personalized care.

When preparing for surgery, most people focus on logistics: dates, doctors, recovery time, and medications. But what often gets overlooked is how to physically prepare the body—particularly the pelvic floor—to support healing and optimize recovery. Whether you’re undergoing a gynecological, urological, colorectal, or abdominal procedure, pelvic floor physiotherapy offers both pre- and post-surgical benefits that can significantly improve outcomes and long-term function.

The pelvic floor is a group of muscles, ligaments, and connective tissues at the base of the pelvis. These muscles support vital organs, regulate continence, aid in sexual function, and help stabilize the spine and hips. Surgery in or near the pelvis—especially procedures like hysterectomy, prostatectomy, bladder repair, hernia surgery, or bowel resection—can temporarily or permanently affect how these muscles function.

Pelvic floor physiotherapy helps patients build resilience before surgery and restore mobility, control, and comfort after. In this blog, we explore how this specialized care can ease your surgical journey and lead to faster, more complete recovery.

Why Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy Matters Before Surgery

Just as athletes condition their bodies before a major event, preparing your pelvic floor and core prior to surgery builds a stronger foundation for healing. This “prehabilitation” or prehab focuses on:

1. Improving Baseline Muscle Strength and Control

Before surgery, your physiotherapist will assess your pelvic floor’s:

Strength and endurance

Ability to contract and relax

Coordination with your breathing and core muscles

With targeted exercises and education, you can build better muscle responsiveness and neuromuscular control—making it easier to activate and use these muscles during your recovery.

2. Establishing Healthy Voiding and Bowel Habits

Many surgeries, particularly those involving the bladder, prostate, or colon, can affect your ability to urinate or have a bowel movement afterward. Pelvic floor physiotherapy teaches you how to:

Adopt better toileting positions

Avoid unnecessary straining

Relax the pelvic floor during voiding

Minimize constipation risk postoperatively

This can reduce complications like urinary retention, incomplete bowel movements, or pain with elimination.

3. Educating You on Post-Surgical Expectations

Your physiotherapist will also walk you through:

What sensations to expect after surgery

How to safely move and support your pelvis during recovery

How to prevent pressure on healing tissues

When and how to resume pelvic floor and core exercises

This reduces anxiety and ensures you feel confident about the next steps.

The Role of Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy After Surgery

Post-surgical pelvic floor physiotherapy supports healing and helps prevent long-term complications such as incontinence, prolapse, scar pain, and pelvic pain. Key benefits include:

1. Restoring Muscle Strength and Function

Surgery can weaken pelvic muscles directly (due to dissection or trauma) or indirectly (due to immobility, fear, or pain). A physiotherapist helps you rebuild:

Strength and endurance of the pelvic floor

Coordination with other core muscles

Proper engagement during everyday movements like walking, lifting, or coughing

Rehabilitation is gentle, progressive, and customized to your healing timeline.

2. Managing Incontinence and Urgency

Incontinence is a common side effect after procedures like prostate surgery, bladder repair, or hysterectomy. It can range from occasional leakage to frequent urgency or loss of control. Physiotherapy helps you:

Regain voluntary control of pelvic floor contractions

Retrain your bladder to improve storage capacity

Learn strategies to manage urgency and frequency

Reduce reliance on pads or medication

Many patients see dramatic improvement in continence with dedicated physiotherapy.

3. Reducing Postoperative Pain and Scar Sensitivity

Surgical scars, including abdominal incisions or internal pelvic scars, can become tight, tender, or restrict movement. Scar tissue can also affect pelvic organ mobility and contribute to:

Pain with sex

Lower back or pelvic pain

Bowel movement difficulties

Pelvic physiotherapists use manual therapy, movement re-education, and soft tissue release to restore tissue mobility and reduce pain.

4. Preventing Pelvic Organ Prolapse

After procedures like hysterectomy or bowel surgery, changes in intra-abdominal pressure and pelvic support can increase the risk of prolapse. Physiotherapy reduces this risk by:

Teaching correct breathing and pressure control

Strengthening pelvic supports

Modifying lifting techniques and posture

Monitoring for early signs of prolapse development

Early intervention often prevents the need for further surgery.

5. Guiding Safe Return to Activity

Your physiotherapist will help you gradually return to:

Daily activities (walking, sitting, lifting)

Core strengthening and movement routines

Sexual activity and intimacy

Exercise and sport, if applicable

They’ll tailor your progression based on your surgery type, healing rate, and goals—ensuring you don’t rush recovery or overlook warning signs.

Conditions That Benefit from Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy Pre- and Post-Surgery

This type of care is especially beneficial for those undergoing:

Hysterectomy (laparoscopic, abdominal, or vaginal)

Prostatectomy (radical or partial)

Bladder or urethral surgery

Colorectal surgery (for cancer, prolapse, or bowel disorders)

Pelvic organ prolapse repair

Endometriosis excision

Cesarean section or perineal repair after childbirth

Abdominal wall reconstruction or hernia repair

Whether your surgery is planned or recent, pelvic floor physiotherapy offers a personalized roadmap to stronger, more sustainable recovery.

What to Expect from a Session at YourFormSux

At YourFormSux, our Toronto-based team provides expert pelvic floor care before and after surgery in a compassionate, judgment-free environment. Here’s what you can expect:

A detailed health history and discussion of your surgery

Pelvic floor strength and coordination assessment (external and/or internal, based on comfort)

Gentle, tailored movement and breathing exercises

Hands-on treatment for pain, tension, or scar tissue

Clear guidance on how to care for your pelvic floor in all stages of recovery

Empowerment through education and support every step of the way

Whether you’re weeks away from surgery or struggling with symptoms months afterward, we’re here to help you move forward with clarity and control.

Final Thoughts: Surgery Isn’t the End—It’s the Beginning of Recovery

While surgery can be life-saving or life-changing, how you recover matters just as much as the procedure itself. Pelvic floor physiotherapy ensures your recovery isn’t left to chance—it gives your body the support it needs to rebuild strength, restore function, and return to full participation in life.

At YourFormSux, we believe every person deserves a recovery plan that’s as specialized and intentional as their surgery.

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