If your prostate surgery is scheduled, you have a window of opportunity that most men don't take advantage of: the weeks before your operation.

Pre-surgical pelvic floor training โ€” often called "pre-hab" โ€” is one of the most evidence-supported interventions in prostatectomy recovery. And yet fewer than 20% of men do it, usually because their surgical team didn't mention it.

What the Research Shows

Multiple randomized controlled trials have examined pre-surgical pelvic floor training and the results are consistent: men who train before surgery regain urinary continence significantly faster than those who start only after surgery.

In a well-cited study, men who completed 4โ€“6 weeks of pre-surgical pelvic floor training were twice as likely to be continent at 1 month post-surgery compared to men who began training only after the operation. By 3 months, the gap narrowed โ€” but the pre-hab group was still ahead.

2xmore likely to be continent at 1 month with pre-hab
4โ€“6 wksoptimal pre-surgery training window
40%faster overall continence recovery

Why Pre-Surgery Training Works

You're Learning When It's Easier

After surgery, finding and activating your pelvic floor muscles is genuinely difficult. The trauma, swelling, and inflammation of surgery make those muscles feel numb, disconnected, or unresponsive. Learning proper technique when everything feels normal โ€” before surgery โ€” gives you a neurological head start.

Stronger Muscles Going In

The pelvic floor will be weakened by surgery regardless. But starting from a higher baseline of strength means you end up at a higher baseline during recovery. A muscle that was strong before surgery recovers faster than one that was weak.

Establishing Motor Patterns

Pelvic floor control is about neuromuscular coordination, not just strength. The "pre-contraction" reflex โ€” automatically tightening the pelvic floor before coughing or standing โ€” needs to be trained. You can establish those patterns before surgery, so they come back faster afterward.

When to Start

The ideal window is 4โ€“8 weeks before surgery. If you have less time than that, start immediately anyway โ€” even 1โ€“2 weeks of training provides some benefit and importantly gets you familiar with proper technique.

If surgery is more than 8 weeks away, start now and then maintain what you've built. There's no harm in being well-prepared.

What Pre-Surgery Training Looks Like

Phase 1 (Weeks 1โ€“2): Finding and Connecting

The first goal is simply learning to find your pelvic floor muscles and activate them correctly โ€” without compensating with your glutes, abs, or thighs. Most men have never consciously engaged these muscles before.

Phase 2 (Weeks 3โ€“4): Building Endurance

Progress to longer holds and different positions once you're confident in your technique.

Phase 3 (Weeks 5โ€“6): Functional Integration

Begin applying pelvic floor work to movement and daily activities.

Stop Before SurgeryMost clinicians recommend stopping intense pelvic floor exercises 2โ€“3 days before surgery to ensure the muscles are relaxed and not fatigued going into the procedure. Gentle awareness exercises are fine.

What to Tell Your Surgeon

Mention that you are doing pre-surgical pelvic floor training. Ask your surgical team:

Our Pre-Surgery Preparation Class

One 90-minute live online class that teaches you exactly what to do before your operation โ€” proper technique, a 6-week program, and what to expect so you can start recovery ahead of the curve.

Book Pre-Surgery Class โ€” $149 Get the Complete Bundle