What Is Diastasis Recti?
The rectus abdominis — the "six-pack" muscle — is actually a paired structure. Two vertical columns of muscle run parallel down the center of your abdomen, separated by a fibrous connective tissue band called the linea alba. Under normal conditions, this gap measures roughly 1–2 centimeters. When it stretches beyond that — through pregnancy, significant weight gain, or even intense abdominal training — the condition is called diastasis recti.
The consequence isn't just cosmetic. When the midline separates, the abdominal wall loses its structural integrity. The belly protrudes, not because of excess fat, but because there's no longer a unified muscular wall to contain the intra-abdominal contents. No amount of exercise can close a true diastasis — the linea alba is connective tissue, not muscle, and it doesn't respond to training. Surgery is the only definitive treatment.
Grading Diastasis Severity
Not all diastasis is equal. The gap width, length, and location along the midline all affect the degree of deformity and the extent of repair required. Surgeons typically classify diastasis using the modified Beer grading system:
| Grade | Gap Width | Extent | Clinical Finding | Severity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grade I | 2.5–3.5 cm | Lower abdomen only | Mild protrusion; often asymptomatic | ● Mild |
| Grade II | 3.5–5 cm | Upper and lower abdomen | Visible midline bulge; functional weakness | ● Moderate |
| Grade III | > 5 cm | Full midline from xiphoid to pubis | Significant protrusion; lower back pain common | ● Severe |
| Grade IV | > 5 cm + attenuation | Full-length, thinned fascia | Functional impairment; may include hernia | ● Complex |
How the Repair Is Performed
During a tummy tuck, once the abdominal skin is elevated off the underlying fascia, the diastasis is directly visualized. This is one of the reasons tummy tuck provides a uniquely thorough repair — it's not a percutaneous or laparoscopic approach. The surgeon can see and feel the entire extent of the separation from the xiphoid process down to the pubic symphysis.
The repair involves placing a series of permanent sutures along the medial edges of the rectus sheaths — the tough fascial envelope surrounding each muscle column. These sutures run from the top of the midline to the bottom, pulling the edges back toward the center and restoring the natural midline tension. The result is called a plication of the anterior rectus sheath.
Skin and subcutaneous tissue elevated off the rectus fascia. Full midline visible from xiphoid to pubis. Extent of separation assessed directly.
Permanent (usually 0-PDS or 0-Prolene) running or interrupted sutures placed along medial fascial edges, re-approximating the midline. Tension tested with breath-hold.
As the repair progresses, the waistline visibly narrows on the table. The anterior projection of the abdomen flattens. Skin removal and repositioning then complete the correction.
"The plication is the engine of the tummy tuck result. Skin removal alone flattens the surface — but repairing the muscle layer flattens the abdomen from the inside and actually reshapes the waist. Patients who get a tummy tuck without a proper diastasis repair have gotten only half the surgery."
— Dr. Farhad Rafizadeh MD FACS
Why Diastasis Repair Transforms Results
Many women who struggle with a persistent "mommy pooch" despite returning to a healthy weight and exercise routine have undiagnosed diastasis recti. The protrusion is entirely structural — a muscle problem that exercise cannot fix — and it can only be addressed at the time of tummy tuck.
A properly performed plication accomplishes several things simultaneously. It flattens the lower abdominal contour by restoring fascial support. It narrows the waistline — often by 2 to 4 centimeters — by drawing the rectus columns toward the midline. It can reduce or eliminate lower back pain caused by compromised core stability. And it restores the functional foundation that makes the skin resection results look natural rather than simply pulled.
Surgeons who rush through or underperform the plication — placing sutures only in the lower segment, or using sutures that are too superficial — produce results that look flat on the table but lose their correction over time as the fascial repair stretches. Dr. Rafizadeh places a full-length plication from xiphoid to pubis with permanent sutures, ensuring the correction holds over years rather than months.
Full-Length vs. Partial Plication
The extent of plication matters enormously and is not always discussed transparently with patients. A lower-segment plication — sometimes called a "mini-plication" — addresses only the gap below the navel. It's technically faster and is adequate for Grade I diastasis localized to the lower abdomen. But for most post-pregnancy patients, the separation extends above the navel as well, and leaving that portion unrepaired leaves the most visible part of the deformity in place.
A full-length plication from the xiphoid to the pubis addresses the entire midline and produces significantly better outcomes in terms of waist contour and projection. The additional operative time is typically 20–30 minutes — a small investment relative to the improvement in the final result.
When evaluating your consultation, it is worth asking your surgeon specifically: "How far will you carry the plication?" If the answer is only to the level of the navel, or if the surgeon doesn't discuss it at all, that is worth probing further.
Concurrent Umbilical Hernia Repair
Diastasis recti and umbilical hernia frequently coexist. An umbilical hernia occurs when a small defect in the fascia at the navel allows intra-abdominal contents — usually a small loop of bowel or omentum — to protrude. It presents as a soft bulge at or around the navel, which may or may not be reducible.
When an umbilical hernia is identified preoperatively, it can be repaired at the same time as the tummy tuck with minimal additional operative time. The hernia defect is closed with permanent sutures, and the plication sutures then reinforce the repair from above. In cases where the hernia involves a large fascial defect, mesh reinforcement may be appropriate, though this is less common.
Patients with an umbilical hernia should discuss this explicitly with their surgeon prior to surgery. In many cases, the hernia repair can be billed separately to insurance, which may offset a portion of the combined procedure cost.
Recovery After Muscle Repair
The plication repair adds meaningful recovery demands beyond what the skin excision alone would require. The sutures are under tension, and the repaired fascia needs time to heal before it can tolerate significant abdominal loading. This is not a reason to avoid the repair — it is a reason to take recovery seriously.
Most patients are up and walking (in a slightly hunched posture) within 24–48 hours. The hunched position reduces tension on the incision and repair. Full upright posture usually returns by 2–3 weeks. Core-loading activities — sit-ups, heavy lifting, vigorous yoga, running — are typically restricted for 6–8 weeks while the fascial repair consolidates. Returning to these activities too early is the most common cause of repair failure.
Abdominal binders worn for the first 4–6 weeks provide support to the repair during this healing period and help control swelling. Most patients find the binder more comfortable than uncomfortable, as it reduces the feeling of "looseness" in the abdominal wall while the fascia heals.
Dr. Rafizadeh performs tummy tuck with diastasis recti repair at his practice in Morristown, NJ, serving patients from Morris County, Essex County, Bergen County, and Union County. Women from Short Hills, Summit, Parsippany, Chatham, Livingston, Madison, Montclair, and throughout North Jersey — many seeking post-pregnancy abdominal restoration — consult with him on the full scope of what a tummy tuck with muscle repair can address. He also sees patients from New York City who want a board-certified plastic surgeon experienced in complex abdominal wall reconstruction.