Can you stand on one leg and climb a stair without sharp pain at the front of your pelvis? If yes, start keeping your legs together for every transfer (turning in bed, getting out of the car) today. If you felt a "give way" at delivery and can't bear weight, or you have a fever, book an urgent appointment instead.
The pubic joint is a zipper at the front of the pelvis. In the common version the zipper still holds, but the slider grinds and complains when you load one leg; the fix is teaching the pelvis to share load, not tightening anything. In the rare version the zipper actually pops open a little at delivery, and that one needs support and time to knit back, not bed rest.
Education + favorable-prognosis framing. Most cases settle. Reframe from "loose ligaments" to load and control. Common settling window ~6 weeks, up to 6 months.
Individualized active rehab — load transfer and motor control built into a multimodal program (not in isolation). Reduces pain severity.
Activity modification — legs together on transfers, avoid wide abduction and single-leg overload, shorter walking strides.
Pelvic belt / support garment as a co-intervention — modest, uncertain relief during weight-bearing tasks. Not a standalone fix.
(True diastasis) pelvic binder + early protected weight bearing + simple pain relief. This is the conservative gold standard.
Acupuncture — an older review rated it "strong" for pregnancy pelvic pain, but newer active-care guidance doesn't emphasize it.
(True diastasis) Surgical fixation (plate, or screw if the back of the ring is involved) — reserved for persistent separation or instability after a conservative trial. Case-series evidence only.
General-population criteria. (For reference: SLH Fit's caseload is all-male; this is clinical reference knowledge.)
Refer: A&E for cauda equina or suspected infection; Obstetrics/Orthopedics for confirmed or large separation; GP/vascular for a suspected clot.
Can you stand on one leg and climb a stair without sharp pain at the front of your pelvis? If yes, start keeping your legs together for every transfer today — turning in bed, getting out of the car.
If you felt a "give way" at delivery and can't bear weight, or you have a fever, book an urgent appointment instead. Don't push through that one.
Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.
What's solid (HIGH): the two-entity distinction (common painful-but-intact SPD vs rare true separation), the favorable natural history, and the red-flag screen before labelling anyone.
What's reasonable (MODERATE): the mechanism is load transfer and control, not relaxin-driven laxity; structured exercise reduces pain severity; conservative-first care for true separation.
What's debunked (LOW): relaxin as the cause, joint-motion size as an individual diagnostic, and bed rest as treatment for a separation.
A properly sized, blinded trial in confirmed true separation (over 1 cm), comparing a binder plus early weight bearing against a defined surgical-threshold protocol, would finally give this end of the spectrum a real dose and a defensible cut-off for surgery.
A trial that isolates exercise dose (frequency and intensity) against a real adherence measure would move exercise from "it helps a bit" to an actual prescription.
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Join The Verdict — freeThe pubic symphysis is a joint where two pelvic bones meet, joined by a tough fibrocartilage pad and reinforced by ligaments above and below. In pregnancy it widens a little, and that's normal. A gap up to about 10 mm is within normal range. Once it passes ~10 mm (over 1 cm), the literature calls it a true diastasis.
The headline is the mechanism reframe. The old story said pregnancy hormones loosen the joint and looseness equals pain. The evidence doesn't back that chain: relaxin level shows no consistent link to the pain, and although symptomatic women have 32–68% more pelvic-joint motion as a group, the overlap with pain-free women is too wide to use motion as a diagnosis in any one person. What tracks with pain is how well the pelvis transfers load. A true separation is a mechanical event at delivery, driven by a big baby, instrumented or fast labor, or shoulder dystocia.
There is no validated special test for this joint with published accuracy numbers. Diagnosis is clinical: front-of-pelvis pain, tender on direct pressure over the symphysis, provoked by single-leg load.
Sacroiliac mobility/palpation tests have poor reliability and shouldn't be leaned on for diagnosis.
Modalities SR, 2015 (PMID 26018758)
"Strong" evidence for pelvic belts and acupuncture; weak for exercise.
Prevention MA 2023 (PMID 36288631) + APTA 2024 [cite-unverified]
Exercise is the active pillar; belts only a co-intervention.
Follow the newer active-care direction. The field has moved from passive monotherapy toward active, exercise-led, multimodal care. Belts are an adjunct, not the treatment.
Mobility SR, 2009 (PMID 19228440)
Symptomatic women have more pelvic motion, so reduce motion.
Relaxin SR 2012 + motor-control SR 2012 (PMID 22310881, 22718046)
Hormone/laxity doesn't predict pain; altered control does.
Treat load transfer and control, not "looseness." Motion is a group-level association with huge individual overlap.
Most high-quality evidence is on pregnancy pelvic girdle pain broadly; true separation runs on case series. Borrowing exercise data and applying it to a fresh 3 cm separation is a category error. Triage which entity you're treating first.
Exercise benefit depends on doing it regularly. The same lesson from postpartum care holds: non-attendance nulls the effect. A small program someone actually repeats beats a perfect one they abandon.
The belt meta-analysis estimate crosses zero. Exercise moves pain severity, not whether you get the pain at all. Expect gradual, modest relief on a favorable natural course, not a quick fix.
Surgery vs conservative: most women recover without surgery. In one cohort the gap closed to under 1.5 cm by 2–6 weeks and 9 of 11 were managed without surgery, though 5 of 11 still had ongoing symptoms at ~22 months. A pelvic brace is described as the conservative gold standard, with symptoms usually easing within 6 weeks (up to 6 months). Surgery is reserved for persistent separation or instability, and the threshold isn't firmly defined (variously cited around 4 cm or "persistent instability"). "Surgery is faster" rests on selected case reports, not randomized evidence.
The rare-but-serious miss: a true separation can drag the back of the pelvic ring with it (joint disruption, fracture, hematoma, urinary injury), and a postpartum mechanical separation has been mistaken for an epidural complication. That's why the weight-bearing check and red-flag screen come first.
Educational self-management guidance, not personalized medical treatment. Peripartum pelvic pain occasionally signals a true joint separation, infection, or clot — if you have any red-flag sign above, seek in-person care. Always consult a qualified clinician about your own situation.
Physio conditions reviewed against clinical evidence. What works, what doesn't, and what to do — from a practising physiotherapist.
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