Endometriosis Symptoms, Diagnosis Delays & Treatment Options
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概要
In this episode, I’m talking about something I see far too often in my practice: women living with endometriosis for years before anyone takes their pain seriously.
Let me say this clearly — debilitating period pain is not normal.
Endometriosis happens when tissue similar to the lining of the uterus starts growing outside of it. Every month, that tissue responds to hormones just like the uterine lining would — except now it’s trapped. It bleeds internally, causing inflammation, scar tissue, chronic pelvic pain, painful sex, heavy periods, chocolate cysts, and sometimes infertility.
And yet, on average, it can take close to 10 years to get a diagnosis.
Why?
We talk about:
- Why severe menstrual pain gets dismissed
- How sexism in medicine still impacts women’s health
- The myth that “bad periods are just part of being a woman”
- Why symptoms are often misread as IBS, anxiety, or just stress
- The difference between endometriosis and adenomyosis
- Why we don’t always need surgery to make the diagnosis anymore
For years, surgery was considered the only “real” way to diagnose endometriosis. But guidelines have evolved. If a woman has classic symptoms and exam findings, we can start treatment without immediately jumping to the operating room. Imaging can help — but it’s not always required.
When it comes to treatment, the goal is simple: reduce estrogen stimulation.
Endometriosis feeds off estrogen. So we focus on hormonal strategies that suppress that stimulation.
Sometimes surgery is necessary — especially for large cysts or extensive disease. And in cases of adenomyosis, hysterectomy can be life‑changing when childbearing is complete.
But here’s what I want women to know:
If your period pain is taking you out of work, school, intimacy, or daily life — that is not something to “push through.”
Chronic pelvic pain deserves answers. Painful sex deserves answers. Heavy bleeding deserves answers.
You deserve to be heard.
In this episode, I break down endometriosis in plain language so you can understand what’s happening in your body — and advocate for the care you need.
You can write to us at Questions@GynoInfo.net
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