What You Need to Know About Pelvic Floor Health After Surgery reveals an angle you may not have considered. Discover insight-rich strategies tailored to your healing path.
Whether you’ve undergone abdominal surgery, prostate removal, hysterectomy, C-section, or another medical procedure, the pelvic floor is often an unspoken casualty in the recovery process. Many people dont realize the extent to which surgery can impact this critical group of musclesuntil symptoms like leakage, pressure, or pain begin to surface.
Pelvic floor health plays a vital role in your overall recovery. It supports your bladder and bowel control, sexual function, posture, and core stability. At YourFormSux (YFS), we help patients across Canada regain pelvic floor function after surgery through compassionate, tailored physiotherapy. This blog outlines what you need to know to protect your recovery, rebuild strength, and prevent long-term complications.
Why Surgery Affects the Pelvic Floor
The pelvic floor doesnt work in isolationit responds to pressure, posture, breathing, and movement. When surgery alters any of these systems, the pelvic floor may either overcompensate or become inhibited.
Surgeries that commonly affect the pelvic floor include:
Abdominal or pelvic surgeries (hysterectomy, prostatectomy, bowel resection)
Orthopedic surgeries (hip, spine, or sacroiliac procedures)
C-section deliveries or vaginal repairs
Bladder or bowel surgeries
Scar tissue, nerve disruption, muscle guarding, and altered body mechanics can all weaken or irritate the pelvic floorleading to symptoms that may persist or worsen over time.
Common Post-Surgical Pelvic Floor Symptoms
Even if your surgery wasnt directly related to the pelvic area, symptoms can still appear weeks or months later. Watch for:
Urinary incontinence or urgency
Pelvic pressure or heaviness
Pain with sitting, walking, or bowel movements
Sexual discomfort or erectile dysfunction
Constipation or incomplete evacuation
Lower back, hip, or tailbone pain
These symptoms often go unreported because people assume they are just part of the healing process. But theyre also signs that your pelvic floor is struggling to function.
What Physiotherapy Can Do After Surgery
Pelvic floor physiotherapy bridges the gap between surgery and full recovery. We dont just treat symptomswe address the underlying muscle dysfunction, compensation patterns, and coordination issues that develop during healing.
At YFS, your pelvic physiotherapist will:
Assess how your surgery has altered posture, breathing, and movement
Identify muscle imbalances, overactivity, or underactivity in your pelvic floor
Guide you through safe reactivation of core and pelvic muscles
Help mobilize scar tissue to restore tissue glide and reduce pain
Design a rehabilitation plan to restore bladder, bowel, and sexual function
This isnt just physical recoveryits functional recovery that improves how you live and move every day.
Timing: When Should You Start Physiotherapy?
You dont need to wait months to begin pelvic rehab. In fact, early intervention often leads to better outcomes. As soon as your physician clears you for gentle movement, a pelvic physiotherapist can begin:
Teaching breathing strategies to reduce intra-abdominal pressure
Improving circulation to the pelvic area
Promoting posture and movement that support healing
Preventing overcompensation and guarding
If youre further along post-op and still experiencing symptoms, physiotherapy can still help. Its never too late to rebuild function and regain control.
Why Pelvic Floor Therapy Is Different from General Rehab
Post-surgical rehab often focuses on visible scars or mobility, but pelvic health often goes unaddressedespecially if the symptoms are internal or “embarrassing” to discuss.
Pelvic floor physiotherapy differs in that it:
Addresses invisible symptoms like incontinence or sexual dysfunction
Treats internal and external muscle systems
Includes breath training, posture correction, and nervous system regulation
Is consent-based, trauma-informed, and always personalized
You wont get vague advice or cookie-cutter exercises. Youll get real answers, real support, and real results.
You Deserve Full RecoveryNot Partial Healing
Surgery may be necessary, but post-operative dysfunction is not inevitable. Symptoms like bladder leaks, pelvic pain, or poor coordination dont mean your body is brokenthey mean your muscles need help re-learning how to function.
Physiotherapy helps you:
Reconnect with your body
Restore confidence in movement
Regain pelvic control and comfort
Rebuild strength without fear or pain
Reclaim Your Pelvic Health with Confidence
At YourFormSux, we believe pelvic health should never be left out of your surgical recovery plan. Youve already been through enoughnow its time to focus on healing from the inside out.






