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Perineal Tear Recovery
Most women who give birth vaginally tear, and most are sent home with a leaflet and a six-week appointment. That's enough when the tear is shallow. When it isn't, the gap between "they stitched me up" and "I'm actually recovered" is where the avoidable damage lives — leaks, painful sex, a scar that never softens, a birth story you can't tell without your shoulders rising. The whole game is knowing which kind of tear you had, what good recovery looks like at each week, and where the system tends to drop you so you can push back.
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The first two weeks are about pain, swelling, and the toileting fear — ice, ibuprofen, a squeeze bottle, and a stool softener handle most of it. The next six months are about pelvic floor function, scar tissue, and getting sex back; that's where pelvic floor physiotherapy earns its keep, and where you'll likely have to ask for the referral yourself. This is one of the harder recoveries most people will ever go through, layered on top of a newborn — and almost all of it pays back if you do the unglamorous work.

Tears are graded by how deep they go, and the grade decides almost everything that follows — pain, healing time, what can go wrong, who you need to see. The classification is the same one your notes and discharge summary will use; ask which one you had if no one told you Sultan and Thakar 2007.

  • First degree — vaginal skin or the skin of the perineum only. No muscle involved. Often doesn't need stitches and heals in a week or two like a graze.
  • Second degree — into the muscle layer of the perineum. Stitches required. The most common substantial tear; this is also what an episiotomy (a deliberate cut made during birth) is equivalent to.
  • Third degree — through the ring of muscle around the anus (the anal sphincter). Subdivided 3a / 3b / 3c by how much of the sphincter is torn. Repair is done in an operating room.
  • Fourth degree — all the way through into the lining of the rectum. Rarer; also repaired in theatre.

Third- and fourth-degree tears together are called OASIS (obstetric anal sphincter injury). They happen in about three to six percent of vaginal births for first-time mothers, lower for women who've given birth before RCOG 2015. Some are missed at the moment of birth — the muscle damage isn't always obvious from the outside — which is one reason every postnatal vaginal exam should include a finger inside the back passage. If yours didn't, that's a fair thing to ask about.

Healing happens in roughly three overlapping phases. Days one to three: swelling and inflammation peak — this is when ice and ibuprofen matter most. Weeks one to three: the skin and surface mucosa knit closed. Months one to twelve: the deeper tissue and any muscle repair remodel — softer, more elastic, less tender — and most of the long-term answer (continence, scar comfort, sex) lands during this window. The skin closing fast is not the same as the wound being healed.

Severity does almost all the work

The honest summary the system rarely says plainly: how your recovery goes depends mostly on what grade of tear you had, and almost everything else is fine-tuning. Knowing your grade — and what's typical for it — is the difference between calibrated expectations and ambient panic.

For first-degree and uncomplicated second-degree tears, the trajectory is genuinely benign. Acute pain dominantly resolves inside two weeks. Most people are physically capable of comfortable intercourse by eight to twelve weeks (whether they want to is another question — see below). Sneeze-leaks at three months are common but mostly improvable with exercise.

For third- and fourth-degree tears, the picture is more mixed.

Risk of a severe tear is highest in a first vaginal birth, with an assisted delivery (forceps more than vacuum), with a large baby, with a long second stage, or when the baby's head is facing the wrong way as it comes out. None of these are controllable in the moment. What is controllable is what happens after — and that's where this entry's actionable centre of gravity sits.

The first two weeks: get through the acute stretch

Nothing here is fancy. It's the unglamorous menu that every maternity unit hands out, and it works.

Pelvic floor exercises start almost immediately — gentle squeezes the day after birth if you can feel anything to squeeze. They don't slow wound healing; they help with swelling and they preserve the muscle's memory while everything around it is angry. Five seconds on, five seconds off, ten times, a few times a day. Build from there.

What "going wrong" looks like — call early

Most wounds heal quietly. The ones that don't tend to flag themselves in the same few ways, and the cost of calling early when you're unsure is essentially zero. The cost of waiting through a developing infection is a torn-open repair, a months-longer recovery, or anal-sphincter dysfunction that didn't have to be permanent Okeahialam et al. 2023.

Wound infection after a third- or fourth-degree repair happens in roughly twenty to thirty percent of cases, and the wound coming partially open (called dehiscence) in the same ballpark Lewicky-Gaupp et al. 2015. That's a lot. After a severe tear especially, take temperature readings if anything feels off and don't wait for the six-week appointment to mention something that's worrying you at week two.

The boring six-month job: pelvic floor physiotherapy

The single highest-leverage thing you can do for your one-year self is get into pelvic floor physiotherapy. Not for the acute tear — for what's underneath it. The same birth that tore the perineum stretched and sometimes injured the muscle hammock that holds your bladder, bowel, and uterus in place. Even uncomplicated births leave roughly three in ten women with some urinary incontinence at three months, and many still have it at twelve Woodley et al., Cochrane 2020. With training, that fraction drops sharply.

The catch, depending on where you live: you may have to ask for the referral. In the NHS, in France, in most of public-system Europe, pelvic floor physiotherapy is funded but supply is patchy and referral isn't automatic in many trusts — bring it up at your six-week appointment by name. In the US it usually isn't covered, runs roughly $80–$200 per session out of pocket, and the cumulative cost over a typical six-to-twelve month course lands in the four-figure range. That's a real burden; it's also one of the cheapest things you'll ever buy for your forty-year-old self.

What it actually involves: an initial assessment (yes, internal — the physiotherapist needs to feel what your muscles are doing), then exercises calibrated to what they find. Some people need to learn to relax the pelvic floor before they can usefully strengthen it. A leaflet of generic squeezes can't tell which side of that line you're on; an assessment can.

What recovery actually looks like, week by week

Onset latency matters here. Some things land in days, some in months, some in a year. Holding those timelines in your head separately is the difference between honest patience and "why am I not better yet."

  • Week one. Sitting is awful. Walking is careful. The first urination stings; the first bowel movement is the thing you dread most. By day three to five the worst of the swelling is starting to come down. Anyone telling you to "rest" while you have a newborn is being polite — what they mean is: let other people bring you everything, do the wound care, and stop trying to host visitors.
  • Weeks two to six. The stitches dissolve. The surface closes. Sitting on a chair stops being an event. Most people stop needing ice or scheduled ibuprofen somewhere in here. The fear that was running under everything in week one quietly loosens. You can probably start gentle walking-pace activity by week three or four, lifting the baby is fine throughout, and full pelvic floor exercises become productive rather than just symbolic.
  • Months two to four. Scar tissue is the new sensation — a tight, sometimes itchy, sometimes numb spot you can feel from the outside or inside. It softens with time and, for many people, with gentle massage of the scar itself (a pelvic floor physiotherapist can show you how; the evidence is small-trial but the practice is consensus and safe once the wound is fully closed). Sex usually becomes physically possible again somewhere in this window, but at three months postpartum roughly a third to over a half of women still report pain with intercourse — much of which is the combination of scar tissue and the relative vaginal dryness that breastfeeding causes O'Brien et al. 2018 Risløkken et al. 2025. Lubricant generously, slowly, and on your own timing. Painful sex is information, not something to push through.
  • Months six to twelve. The continence picture you have at twelve months is, roughly, the one you're going to have without further intervention. If sneeze-leaks are still there, if there's any leakage of stool or gas you can't control, if sex still hurts in the same way it did at three months — this is when to escalate, not when to write it off as the new normal. The window where things change easily is closing but not closed.

What people around you notice: at first, that you can't sit through dinner. Then, that you can. The version of you who, a year on, lifts the baby without bracing, runs after a toddler without thinking about her pelvic floor, has stopped flinching when she sneezes — that version is not luck. It is the boring six months of doing exercises a physiotherapist gave you, asking for a second referral when the first one didn't help, and refusing to accept "well, that's just what happens after a baby" from anyone who told you it.

What the leaflet didn't tell you

  • "A cut is cleaner than a tear, so episiotomies prevent worse damage." The opposite is what the evidence shows. Routine episiotomy doesn't reduce severe perineal injury; restrictive episiotomy — only when there's a specific reason — produces less severe perineal trauma overall Jiang et al., Cochrane 2017. The exception is some assisted deliveries, where the calculus changes.
  • "Six weeks and you're back to normal." Six weeks is when the surface is closed and you'll be discharged from maternity care. The deeper tissue, the scar, the continence picture, and sex are all still moving for another six to nine months.
  • "If I tore badly the first time, I'll tear badly again." Recurrence risk for a severe tear in a subsequent vaginal birth is around five to seven percent — elevated against the baseline, but the absolute majority of women with a previous severe tear do not retear. The future-birth decision (vaginal again versus elective caesarean) is a real one and worth a dedicated conversation with an obstetrician, but it isn't foreordained.
  • "Kegels are enough." Generic pelvic floor squeezes from a leaflet help some people and miss others entirely — including people whose problem is a pelvic floor that's too tight, where squeezing more makes things worse. An assessment is what tells which side of that line you're on.
  • "Leaks are just what happens after a baby." Leaks are common after a baby. They are not something you have to accept indefinitely. Most respond to structured training; the ones that don't are usually fixable by less common means. The thing to refuse is the idea that nothing can be done.
  • "Painful sex will sort itself out." Sometimes; not always. Pain at three months that's still there at six months won't usually disappear at twelve without intervention. The intervention exists.

The trauma piece, named honestly

Tearing badly during birth is one of the most common ways childbirth becomes a trauma rather than just a hard memory. Around one in eight women report childbirth-related post-traumatic stress symptoms; roughly one in twenty-five meet the clinical bar for postnatal PTSD. Perineal trauma — the unexpected severity of it, the time it takes to heal, the moments in the immediate aftermath when you didn't feel cared for — is independently associated with that elevation, separate from how the labour itself went Skinner et al. 2018.

The felt shape of it: a flinch when someone asks how the birth went; avoidance of conversations with friends about their pregnancies; a quiet decision, sometimes years before you'd notice you made it, that you're done having children. None of that is overreaction. It's a normal nervous-system response to a normal-but-significant injury that wasn't explained well at the time.

What helps, separately from the physical recovery: a birth-debrief appointment (most maternity units offer one — ask), a trauma-informed therapist if the flashbacks or avoidance persist past a few months, and naming the experience honestly with the people closest to you instead of editing it into a tidier story. The relationship between body and mind here runs both ways — pelvic pain feeds anxiety feeds pelvic tension feeds more pelvic pain — and untangling either end usually loosens the other.

Adjacent topics this entry doesn't cover directly: pelvic floor exercises as an ongoing practice independent of the immediate postpartum window; postnatal depression and PTSD treatment in depth; the decision between vaginal birth and elective caesarean for a subsequent pregnancy after a severe tear; pelvic organ prolapse and its management later in life. All worth their own search when the time comes.

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