The best way of getting rid of stomach overhang is a surgical procedure known as abdominoplasty at our London clinic, which will remove it completely. This procedure tightens the stomach muscles and removes excess skin and fatty tissues from the middle and lower abdominal region.
You can reduce the overhang by reducing overall fat.
You can't spot-reduce fat, but you can lose fat by walking more, eating whole foods, and focusing on protein and fiber to fill your diet (lean protein, veggies and fruit).
Generally, if the muscles are going to heal on their own, they will within three months of birth. If you are several months postpartum, it's likely that your diastasis recti is here to stay. Some women have had success using targeted exercises to help the muscles move closer together.
During pregnancy, the muscles stretch to accommodate the growing fetus. The connective tissue between the abdominal muscles can thin and weaken, and that can lead to a bulge in your belly. That post-pregnancy bulge is commonly known as a "mommy pooch" or "mommy-tummy" and it will not go away with diet and exercise.
Your stomach muscles will usually go back to normal by the time your baby is eight weeks old. Diastasis recti exercises will help with this. If you still have an obvious gap at eight weeks, then your muscles may still be long and weak.
The good news is: Regardless of whether you have a mommy pooch or a tummy overhang after a c-section, the strategies to get rid of them are similar. You must lower your body fat percentage through a combination of eating fewer calories, eating healthier foods, and engaging in regular physical activity.
Pregnancy, weight loss, and weight gain can cause you to have an excessive amount of fat, tissue, and skin hanging down from your abdomen. Called “apron belly” because it looks like you're wearing an apron around your waist, it can also be referred to as a pannus stomach.
You can reduce your mum tum via diet, exercise, or a combination of both. Of course, as you might expect, it all depends on what exactly is causing your post-pregnancy pooch. If your mum tum is primarily caused by pregnancy weight gain, diet or exercise could do the trick.
When the tissue loses its elasticity from being overstretched, the gap in the abdominals will not close as much as it should. This is diastasis recti. If you have diastasis, your belly may appear to stick out just above or below the belly button, making you appear pregnant months or years after giving birth.
During pregnancy, the muscles stretch to accommodate the growing fetus. The connective tissue between the abdominal muscles can thin and weaken, and that can lead to a bulge in your belly. That post-pregnancy bulge is commonly known as a "mommy pooch" or "mommy-tummy" and it will not go away with diet and exercise.
Cutting down your calories is an effective way of dealing with belly fat. You can reduce the number of calories you eat every day by about five hundred calories (2). This will help you lose general body fat as well as belly fat. Being active is also essential in the fight against stomach overhang.
For small to moderate amounts of weight loss, your skin will likely retract on its own. Natural home remedies may help too. However, more significant weight loss may need body-contouring surgery or other medical procedures to tighten or get rid of loose skin.
The most common way to get rid of a C-section overhang is with an Abdominoplasty procedure, often known as a Tummy Tuck. A tummy tuck procedure with an expert MYA surgeon will remove excess skin or fat, unwanted scars, stretch marks and tighten the stomach muscles, to create the appearance of a flatter stomach.
Making changes to your exercise routine, diet and lifestyle can add up to inches lost and a firmer abdomen. Making healthy food choices as well as strengthening your core work together to create a leaner profile.
Although the cause of such a condition cannot be attributed to one factor only, an unhealthy lifestyle typically contributes to it. Pregnancy and weight fluctuations also result in a sagging lower abdomen. A healthy diet and exercise regimen may not be enough to correct the issue – a mini tummy tuck is often required.
Your genetics prefer storing fat in your stomach area
Visceral fat—the type of fat the body stores in your abdomen and around your intestines and is mostly responsible for keeping people from a flat belly—can be partly determined by genetics.
Loose skin can be tightened with collagen supplements, bariatric surgery, or radiofrequency treatments.
“In general, it can take anywhere from weeks to months—even years,” says Dr. Chen. If after one to two years skin is still loose, it may not get any tighter, she says.
C-Sections and CoolSculpting
Some women are able to reduce or even eliminate this pouch through diet and exercise; others may not be so fortunate. The good news is that CoolSculpting is able to reduce this pouch in most cases substantially.