
What is Endometriosis and How It Affects Your Health
Endometriosis affects roughly 1 in 10 women of reproductive age worldwide and yet remains under-diagnosed.
In short, the condition occurs when tissue similar to the uterine lining grows outside the uterus, and consequently it causes inflammation, pain, and sometimes infertility.
Below, you’ll find an up-to-date, SEO-friendly guide that explains symptoms, diagnosis, treatment options, and practical steps to protect your reproductive health.
What exactly is endometriosis?
Endometriosis happens when tissue that looks and behaves like the uterine lining (endometrium) grows in places it shouldn’t — for example, on the ovaries, fallopian tubes, pelvic walls, or bladder.
Each month this tissue responds to hormones: it thickens, breaks down and bleeds, but because it lies outside the uterus it cannot exit the body.
As a result, the area becomes inflamed and scar tissue (adhesions) forms, which leads to chronic pain and, in many cases, fertility challenges.
Common symptoms to watch for
Symptoms vary widely, and importantly, severity of pain does not always match the extent of disease. However, the most frequent symptoms include:
- Pelvic pain: often severe during periods, and sometimes between cycles or during ovulation.
- Heavy or prolonged periods: which can cause fatigue and iron deficiency.
- Painful intercourse (dyspareunia): deep pelvic pain during or after sex.
- Infertility: up to 30–50% of women with endometriosis have difficulty conceiving.
- Bladder/bowel symptoms: pain with urination or bowel movements, especially around menses.
- Systemic symptoms: fatigue, nausea, bloating, and gastrointestinal upset.
How endometriosis affects your body and fertility
Endometriosis harms reproductive function in several ways. First, adhesions can distort pelvic anatomy and block fallopian tubes, which prevents sperm and egg from meeting.
Second, chronic inflammation alters the pelvic environment and may impair egg quality or implantation.
Third, repeated surgeries for endometriosis can reduce ovarian reserve, so timing and individualized planning matter when fertility is a priority.
What causes endometriosis?
Researchers suspect multiple contributing factors: retrograde menstruation, genetic predisposition, immune dysfunction, and hormonal influences.
Nevertheless, the exact cause remains uncertain, and current evidence supports a multifactorial origin. For recent reviews, see PubMed and NCBI resources (NCBI review).
How doctors diagnose endometriosis
Because symptoms mimic other conditions (for example, IBS or pelvic inflammatory disease), diagnosis starts with history and examination.
Then, clinicians typically order targeted imaging such as transvaginal ultrasound or MRI when appropriate.
Crucially, the only definitive test remains diagnostic laparoscopy with visual confirmation and biopsy; however, many clinicians begin treatment based on clinical suspicion to reduce delay.
Treatment options — tailored to your goals
Treatment depends on symptom severity, age, and whether you wish to conceive. Importantly, care should be individualized and often combines medical, surgical, and lifestyle approaches.
1. Pain and medical management
- NSAIDs (e.g., ibuprofen) for mild pain relief.
- Hormonal therapies — combined oral contraceptives, progestins (including LNG-IUD like Mirena), and GnRH agonists/antagonists reduce lesion activity and help control pain.
- Adjuncts — hormonal add-ons (e.g., aromatase inhibitors) in refractory cases under specialist care.
2. Surgical options
Laparoscopic excision or ablation removes visible disease and adhesions, often improving pain and fertility.
Because surgery can affect ovarian reserve, careful surgical planning matters, especially for women pursuing pregnancy.
In severe, refractory cases where fertility is complete, hysterectomy with or without removal of ovaries may be considered after thorough counseling.
3. Fertility strategies
If conception is difficult, options include ovulation induction, intrauterine insemination (IUI), or in vitro fertilization (IVF).
IVF often provides the best chance when tubal damage or severe pelvic disease exists; therefore, early referral to a fertility specialist helps couples plan effectively.
4. Lifestyle and supportive care
Alongside medical treatment, patients benefit from pelvic physiotherapy, dietary adjustments that reduce inflammation, structured exercise, and psychological support.
Pain-focused clinics and support groups also improve coping and quality of life.
When to see a specialist
See a gynecologist if you have disabling period pain, painful intercourse, infertility, or persistent bowel/bladder symptoms that worsen cyclically.
In addition, if first-line therapies fail, ask for referral to a specialist with expertise in advanced endometriosis and fertility-preserving surgery.
Reliable external resources and further reading
- World Health Organization (WHO)
- NHS – Endometriosis
- ACOG – Endometriosis FAQs
- Mayo Clinic – Endometriosis
- PubMed – Recent Reviews
Internal links & clinic resources
For local care, book an appointment with Dr. Nitasha Gupta, a specialist in minimally invasive gynecology and fertility in Chandigarh & Panchkula.
Also visit our About page and clinic Home for patient resources and treatment pathways.
Practical takeaways — what you can do today
- If you have severe period pain, keep a symptom diary and seek medical review.
- Discuss fertility plans early; saving eggs or early referral can preserve options.
- Try anti-inflammatory diet measures and regular low-impact exercise to reduce baseline pain.
- Seek multidisciplinary care — pain specialists, physiotherapists, and counsellors help long-term outcomes.
Conclusion
Endometriosis can deeply affect physical and emotional health, yet timely recognition and a personalised treatment plan improve outcomes for most women.
Because the condition varies widely, working with an experienced gynecologist helps tailor treatment to your symptoms and fertility goals.
To schedule a consultation, please book an appointment or visit our clinic website.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q1. Can endometriosis be cured?
Currently, no universal cure exists; however, medical and surgical treatments control symptoms and improve fertility for many women.
Q2. Does endometriosis always cause infertility?
Not always. Many women with endometriosis conceive naturally, but the condition increases the risk of subfertility, especially in moderate-to-severe disease.
Q3. Is laparoscopy necessary for every patient?
No. Clinicians increasingly start treatment based on symptoms and imaging, reserving laparoscopy for diagnostic uncertainty, severe pain, or fertility-focused surgery.




