Early rehabilitation of abdominal muscle wall following lower transverse abdominal incision in women: a randomized clinical trial

Authors

  • Eman Awad Associate professor of physical therapy for woman’s health, Physical Therapy Department for Woman and Child Health, Faculty of Physical Therapy, Beni-Suef University
  • Mohamed Naeem Associate professor of basic sciences, Basic Sciences Department, Faculty of Physical Therapy, Beni-Suef University
  • Ali Mobark Associate Professor of Gynaecology and Obstetrics, Faculty of Medicine, Beni-Suef University
  • Ahmed Abdel Fattah Zidan Associate Professor of Radiology, Department of Radiology, Faculty of Medicine, Beni-Suef University
  • Hamada Ahmed Associate Professor of Biomechanics, Biomechanics Department, Faculty of Physical Therapy, Cairo University
  • Reham Alaa Elkalla Department of Physical therapy for Surgery and Burn, Faculty of Physical Therapy, Badr University in Cairo
  • Doaa Saeed Department of Physical therapy for Women’s Health, Faculty of Physical Therapy, Badr University in Cairo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47197/retos.v76.118119

Keywords:

Abdominal muscle, lower transverse incision, rectus abdominis thickness, rehabilitation

Abstract

Introduction: historically, the gynaecologist- obstetrician has favoured lower abdominal transverse incisions. For the abdominal muscle, there is a relevant surgical-related muscle loss induced by major surgical trauma after lower transverse incisions as well as fatigue and restricted respiratory movements during the early postoperative days.

Objective: this study aimed to assess the impact of inducing rehabilitation program for abdominal muscles very early after lower abdominal transverse incisions.

Methodology: a prospective randomized clinical trial that compared 2 groups of 60 participants was conducted. All participants were postoperative women after their 1st cesarean delivery, hysterectomy, and myomectomy. Group A included participants who joined an early specific exercise rehabilitation program for abdominal muscles and postoperative advice. Group B included control volunteers who received the same postoperative care at the hospital and at home as group A.

Results: between-groups comparisons revealed a statistically significant increase in rectus abdominis muscle thickness in favor of group A participants. Additionally, postoperative incisional pain was significantly lower among group A participants, suggesting a strong negative correlation between muscle thickness and postoperative pain.

Conclusions: in summary, adding early mobilization abdominal exercises for rehabilitation programs was very effective to strengthen abdominal muscles, decrease annoying post operative incisional pain and promote early recovery after lower abdominal surgery in women in resources limited countries.

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Published

02-03-2026

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Original Research Article

How to Cite

Awad, E., Naeem, M., Mobark, A., Abdel Fattah Zidan, A., Ahmed, H., Elkalla, R. A., & Saeed, D. (2026). Early rehabilitation of abdominal muscle wall following lower transverse abdominal incision in women: a randomized clinical trial. Retos, 76, 112-119. https://doi.org/10.47197/retos.v76.118119