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Lotus Endometriosis Institute is a program under Steven Vasilev MD PC, which operates out-of-network with all insurance providers. Our patient advocacy finance team will contact your insurer on your behalf and can often help arrange coverage.
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Santa Monica, CA
2121 Santa Monica Blvd, Santa Monica, CA 90404
Arroyo Grande, CA
154 Traffic Way, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420
Common Questions
Is it normal to feel like you’re making up endometriosis symptoms?
Yes—this is incredibly common, and it usually happens because you’ve been living in a system where pelvic pain is often normalized, minimized, or explained away. When tests come back “normal,” or you’re told it’s stress/IBS/UTIs without a cohesive plan, it can start to feel like the problem must be you. Endometriosis symptoms can be wide-ranging and sometimes seem unrelated, which makes self-doubt even easier to fall into—especially if you’ve had years of mixed messages.
In our practice, one of the first goals is validation through clarity: we take your full story seriously, look for symptom patterns and flare timing, and evaluate for endometriosis along with common look-alike or coexisting conditions that can amplify pain (like pelvic floor dysfunction, central sensitization, GI imbalance, or vascular causes). Endometriosis can cause many symptoms, but it doesn’t explain everything—so we’re careful and specific about what fits, what doesn’t, and what to investigate next. If you’re stuck in the “maybe it’s nothing” loop, reach out to schedule a consultation so we can help make your symptoms clinically legible and build a real path forward.
Which endometriosis symptoms mean I should go to the ER?
Endometriosis can cause intense pain, but certain symptoms are not something to “wait out.” Go to the ER if you have sudden, severe pelvic or abdominal pain that’s different from your usual pattern (especially if it’s one-sided), pain with fainting, or pain plus fever/chills, repeated vomiting, or a rigid/distended abdomen. Those combinations can signal emergencies like ovarian torsion, a ruptured cyst, appendicitis, infection, or other acute abdominal problems that can look like an endometriosis flare but require urgent evaluation.
Also seek emergency care for heavy bleeding that’s soaking through pads/tampons rapidly, passing large clots with dizziness or weakness, or any concern for pregnancy with pelvic pain or bleeding (including the possibility of ectopic pregnancy). If you develop chest pain, shortness of breath, or coughing up blood—especially if symptoms cycle with your period—treat that as an emergency as well. After the urgent issue is addressed, our team can help you step back and evaluate the bigger picture: why the symptoms are happening, whether endometriosis/adenomyosis or another overlapping condition is driving them, and what a clear plan toward durable relief could look like—reach out when you’re ready.
Can IVF workup detect endometriosis?
Yes—endometriosis can be suspected during an IVF workup, but it’s often not definitively “found” unless there’s a clear clue. Antral follicle count ultrasound may reveal an ovarian endometrioma, and your history (painful periods, pain with sex, bowel/bladder symptoms, prior cysts) can raise suspicion even when routine imaging looks normal.
What IVF testing typically can’t do is reliably rule endometriosis out. Superficial disease and many forms of deep endometriosis may be missed on standard pelvic ultrasound, and even high-quality imaging needs expert interpretation to identify subtler patterns or related conditions like adenomyosis.
If endometriosis is a concern during fertility planning, our team focuses on a thorough, story-driven evaluation plus targeted exam and expertly interpreted ultrasound/MRI when appropriate—so you’re not left guessing between “unexplained infertility” and a potentially treatable root cause. If you’re in the middle of IVF decisions, reach out to schedule a consultation so we can help you clarify what may be present and how it could impact next steps.
What kind of doctor evaluates suspected nerve endometriosis?
A fellowship-level endometriosis excision surgeon is typically the right starting point when nerve endometriosis is suspected—especially when symptoms suggest deep disease in the retroperitoneum (for example, buttock/hip pain, sciatica-like pain down the leg, or neurologic symptoms that may flare around your cycle). Nerve involvement is uncommon and easy to miss, so the key is a clinician who routinely evaluates deep infiltrating endometriosis and understands how pelvic nerves can be irritated, tethered, or directly involved.
In our practice, evaluation begins with a detailed symptom timeline and flare pattern, followed by a careful exam and expertly interpreted imaging (often MRI) when it can help map disease near structures like the sciatic notch. We also look for look-alike or overlapping drivers of nerve pain—such as pelvic floor dysfunction, small fiber neuropathy, or central sensitization—because endometriosis can coexist with other pain generators. If findings support it, surgical planning may include neuropelveologic-style pain mapping and precise excision around specific nerves, with a coordinated team approach when other organ systems could be involved. If you’re worried your symptoms fit this pattern, reach out to schedule a consultation so we can help clarify what’s most likely driving your nerve pain and what the next step should be.
Can you have endometriosis without pelvic pain?
Yes—endometriosis can be present even if you don’t have classic pelvic pain. Symptom severity doesn’t reliably match the amount, location, or “stage” of disease, and some people have minimal or no pain despite significant findings.
When pelvic pain isn’t the main feature, endometriosis may show up in other ways, such as infertility, heavy or abnormal bleeding patterns, pain with sex, bowel or bladder symptoms (especially if they fluctuate with your cycle), or persistent bloating and GI disruption that gets mislabeled as “just IBS.” Because endometriosis can involve different organs and can coexist with look-alike conditions, our evaluation focuses on your full symptom pattern, exam findings, and high-quality imaging when appropriate.
If you suspect endometriosis despite little or no pelvic pain, we can help you sort out whether endometriosis is likely, what else could be contributing, and whether a surgical diagnosis and strategic excision makes sense for your goals (pain relief, fertility, or both). You can explore our approach and reach out to schedule a consultation with our team when you’re ready.
Egg freezing vs embryo freezing with endometriosis: which is better?
If you have endometriosis, “better” usually depends on what decision you can make right now: do you have (or want to use) a specific sperm source, and are you trying to preserve fertility as a solo option or as a plan with a partner. Embryo freezing often gives the clearest picture of what you’ve preserved because eggs have already been fertilized and developed, while egg freezing preserves reproductive flexibility if your plans, relationship status, or sperm choice could change.
Endometriosis can affect fertility through more than one pathway—ovarian factors (including endometriomas and ovarian reserve), pelvic anatomy/adhesions, and implantation biology—so freezing is often part of a bigger strategy rather than the whole answer. If your main concern is protecting future options before possible surgery or as time passes, egg freezing may fit that goal; if your priority is maximizing a known plan with known sperm, embryo freezing may be the more direct path.
We help patients map these choices to their actual situation—your age and ovarian reserve markers, whether endometriomas are present, prior surgeries, pain/inflammation patterns, and whether there may be additional fertility factors beyond endometriosis. If you’d like, reach out to our team for a coordinated plan that fits both symptom management and fertility preservation, so the timing of treatment and the next steps make sense together.


