Lower Abdominal Protrusion (Pouch Belly)
Lower abdominal protrusion not explained by body fat alone. Often driven by diastasis recti, breathing pattern dysfunction, TVA deactivation, pelvic floor weakness, and rib cage position. Common postpartum and in individuals with chronic APT or abdominal wall incompetence.
Key ROM Tests
Risk Factors Assessed
Expected Timeline
8-16 weeks for breathing/TVA activation, 16-24 weeks for visible change, diastasis recti may require 6+ months
Frequently Asked Questions
Can lower abdominal protrusion (pouch belly) be corrected with exercise?
What assessments are done for lower abdominal protrusion (pouch belly)?
Is lower abdominal protrusion (pouch belly) the same for everyone?
How do I get started with the Lower Abdominal Protrusion (Pouch Belly) protocol?
Get your Lower Abdominal Protrusion (Pouch Belly) assessment
Your coach runs this protocol as part of your structural evaluation, then builds a personalized corrective plan based on the data.
Apply for AssessmentProtocol Details
- Category
- Condition
- Subcategory
- Postural Dysfunction
- ROM Tests
- 6
- Corrective Targets
- 4
- Benchmarked
- Yes
- Red Flag Screens
- 4
- Timeline
- 8-16 weeks for breathing/TVA activation, 16-24 weeks for visible change, diastasis recti may require 6+ months
Take our 2-minute quiz to identify your pain patterns and get a personalized correction plan.
Related Condition Protocols
Excessive anterior rotation of the pelvis increasing lumbar lordosis. Driven by hip flexor shortening, weak glutes, altered breathing patterns, and rib cage position dysfunction. Common in sedentary populations and lifters who skip glute activation work.
Ankle Sprains (Chronic Instability)Recurrent lateral ankle sprains with persistent instability. Assessment targets peroneal strength, proprioceptive capacity, ankle ROM, and proximal hip stabilizer contribution to ankle loading patterns.
External Rotation Gait (Duck Feet)Externally rotated foot position during gait, driven by tibial torsion, hip external rotation dominance, ankle eversion, and foot pronation patterns. Can be structural (tibial/femoral torsion) or functional (muscle imbalance).
Lateral Knee PainPain on the outer aspect of the knee, most commonly IT band friction syndrome (ITBS). Assessment targets ITB length (Ober's test), hip abductor strength, ankle dorsiflexion, and lateral meniscus provocation.
Text Neck / Phone PostureCervical flexion posture from sustained phone and device use, accelerating disc degeneration, headache, and upper trap tension. Assessment targets cervical lordosis, deep neck flexor function, thoracic extension, and screen-time habits.
Rounded Upper Back (Thoracic Kyphosis)Excessive thoracic flexion creating a rounded upper back. Driven by pec tightness, scapular protraction, rib cage depression, weak thoracic extensors, and sustained flexed postures. Upstream driver for forward head posture and shoulder impingement.