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GI Symptoms

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Clarifies how endometriosis impacts the gut—bloating, pain, diarrhea/constipation—and how to tell it apart from IBS/IBD. Find evidence-based workups, risks, and treatment strategies, plus when to involve GI and gynecology teams.

Overview

Gastrointestinal symptoms are common in endometriosis due to inflammatory mediators and nerve cross‑talk between pelvic organs and the bowel. Even without bowel lesions, prostaglandins released during menses can speed transit and draw fluid into the gut, causing cramping and diarrhea; between cycles, low‑grade inflammation, adhesions, or pelvic floor guarding can slow transit and lead to bloating and constipation. Adenomyosis may add pressure and cramping that amplify GI discomfort.


Effective care starts with pattern recognition and targeted evaluation. Learn how to track symptom timing with the cycle, meals, and stress; which red flags warrant urgent assessment; and when to involve gynecology and gastroenterology together. Explore evidence‑based ways to ease flares and improve regularity—medications, bowel‑directed strategies, and nervous‑system‑calming tools—while distinguishing gut‑dominant IBS/IBD from pelvic disease. For testing pathways and mapping deep disease, see Diagnostics & Imaging and, when bowel involvement is suspected, Bowel Endometriosis. Nutrition and microbiome‑informed approaches are covered in Gut Health and Nutrition; day‑to‑day pain strategies appear under At-Home Remedies and Pain Relief.

Common Questions

Can endometriosis cause a painful bump near the anus?

Yes. Endometriosis can contribute to pain and pressure around the rectum and anal area, especially when disease involves the rectum/rectosigmoid region or nearby tissues. Many patients describe deep pain with bowel movements, rectal pressure, or symptoms that flare around their cycle, and those patterns can fit bowel or deep infiltrating endometriosis.


That said, a sensitive bump on the anus itself is more often something else (like a hemorrhoid, fissure, skin infection/abscess, or another localized anal/skin condition). In some cases, pelvic disease can coexist with these issues, which is why we don’t assume every finding is endometriosis—or dismiss it as “nothing.”


If you’re noticing a new, persistent, or worsening bump—especially if it’s very tender, draining, bleeding, or associated with fever—we want to evaluate the full picture. Our team can sort out whether your symptoms point toward bowel endometriosis, a separate anorectal condition, or both, and plan next steps such as a focused exam and, when appropriate, expertly interpreted imaging to map possible deep disease.

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What is the Enzian score for endometriosis?

The Enzian score is a detailed way clinicians describe where deep infiltrating endometriosis (DIE) is located and how extensive it is. Unlike simple “stage” systems, Enzian focuses on endometriosis that grows into deeper tissues and can involve structures like the uterosacral ligaments, rectovaginal area, bowel, bladder, and ureters—areas that often drive bowel, urinary, or deep pain symptoms.


In practical terms, an Enzian classification helps your surgical team communicate the anatomic pattern of disease and plan the right imaging, operative approach, and multidisciplinary support when organs may be involved. It’s also a reminder that symptom severity doesn’t always match what’s seen on exam or imaging—deep disease can be easy to miss without a targeted evaluation. If you’ve been told your findings are “mild” but your symptoms suggest deeper involvement, our team can help interpret prior reports and discuss what an Enzian-style mapping and excision-focused plan could look like.

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How long does endo belly (bloating) usually last?

“Endo belly” can last anywhere from a few hours to several days, and for some people it can linger longer or feel nearly constant during certain parts of the month. The duration often depends on what’s driving it for you—hormone-linked inflammation around ovulation or a period, bowel slowing/constipation, pelvic adhesions restricting organ movement, or a combination. Many patients notice it waxes and wanes, sometimes changing noticeably within the same day.


If your bloating is predictable and cyclical, that pattern can be a clue that endometriosis or adenomyosis-related inflammation is playing a major role—even when imaging looks “normal.” If it’s frequent, severe, or paired with bowel or bladder symptoms (pain with bowel movements, urinary urgency, rectal pressure), it can also suggest deeper pelvic disease or significant inflammation affecting nearby organs. Our team can help you sort out whether your “endo belly” is primarily hormonal, GI-driven, or related to pelvic disease that may benefit from targeted treatment, including excision when appropriate—reach out to schedule a consultation and we’ll map your symptoms to a clear plan.

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What is endo belly?

“Endo belly” is the common term patients use for the severe bloating and abdominal swelling that can happen with endometriosis. It’s often described as a belly that looks or feels suddenly distended—sometimes within hours—and may come and go in waves, frequently worsening around a period but not always. Importantly, this can mimic weight gain even when the underlying issue is swelling, fluid shifts, or gastrointestinal distension rather than true fat gain.


Endometriosis can irritate tissues in the pelvis and abdomen and can also affect (or “talk to”) the bowel, which helps explain why many people notice constipation, diarrhea, cramping, or a tight, pressured abdomen alongside pelvic pain. You can have significant digestive symptoms even when routine GI testing looks normal, because endometriosis often involves the outer surface or deeper layers around the bowel rather than the inner lining.


If endo belly is a major part of your symptom pattern—especially when it comes with painful bowel movements, cyclical flares, or persistent pelvic pain—our team can help you sort out what’s driving it and what treatment options are most likely to bring relief. Explore our educational resources, and if you’re ready, reach out to schedule a consultation so we can review your history and build a plan around your goals.

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Can endometriosis cause inflammation-related weight gain?

Yes—there can be a connection, but it’s usually not as simple as “inflammation makes you gain fat.” Endometriosis is an inflammatory condition, and that inflammation can drive fluid shifts, pelvic and abdominal swelling, bowel slowing/constipation, and the classic waxing-and-waning “endo belly,” all of which can look and feel like weight gain even when body fat hasn’t changed. Pain, fatigue, and stress can also reduce activity or change appetite patterns, which can indirectly affect body composition over time.


What’s also emerging in research is a possible link between endometriosis and certain metabolic risk patterns in some people (like central waist changes and lipid markers). That doesn’t prove endometriosis directly causes metabolic changes—or that metabolic changes cause endometriosis—but it does support why some patients feel their body is harder to “regulate” while the disease is active. If weight changes, bloating, or a new shift in your waistline is part of your story, our team can help you sort out what’s most likely inflammation and GI distension versus longer-term metabolic or hormonal contributors, and build a plan that aligns with your symptoms and goals. If you’d like, you can reach out to schedule a consultation so we can evaluate the full picture and discuss treatment options, including excision and coordinated whole-person care.

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Can endometriosis cause a bowel obstruction?

Yes—endometriosis can cause a bowel obstruction, but it’s uncommon. When endometriosis involves the bowel (most often the rectum or sigmoid colon), deep disease and scarring can narrow the bowel (stenosis) or tether it in ways that interfere with normal passage of stool and gas. In these cases, symptoms may look “GI” rather than gynecologic, and a colonoscopy can still appear normal because endometriosis often affects the outer bowel wall or deeper layers instead of the inner lining.


More often, bowel endometriosis causes chronic or cyclical symptoms like painful bowel movements, constipation/diarrhea shifts, bloating, cramping, nausea, or rectal bleeding that tracks with your cycle. If your symptoms suggest significant narrowing—or you’ve had episodes of severe distension, vomiting, or inability to pass stool/gas—our team focuses on careful pre-op mapping and surgical planning so the right expertise is in the room. If you’re dealing with bowel symptoms alongside pelvic pain, we encourage you to explore our bowel endometriosis information and reach out to schedule a consultation so we can evaluate the full picture and discuss next steps.

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Can mild symptoms still mean serious endometriosis?

Yes. Symptom intensity and symptom frequency don’t reliably match how extensive or complex endometriosis is—some people have advanced disease with relatively “mild” or intermittent pain, while others have severe pain with less visible disease. Staging and subtype (for example, deep infiltrating endometriosis or ovarian endometriomas) are about where endometriosis is and how it behaves, not a simple pain scale.


This is one reason endometriosis can be missed for years: lesions can be deep, higher in the abdomen, or involving the bowel, bladder, or ureters, and symptoms may be subtle, cyclical, or look like IBS, bladder pain, or musculoskeletal issues. Imaging can be helpful for suspected deeper disease or related conditions, but a normal scan doesn’t automatically rule endometriosis out.


If you’re having persistent patterns—period pain that disrupts life, pain with sex, bowel or urinary symptoms around your cycle, unexplained fatigue, or fertility challenges—our team takes a whole-body, details-first approach to evaluation. We’ll listen closely to your full timeline, consider conditions that mimic or overlap with endometriosis, and use targeted exam and expert imaging interpretation when appropriate. If you’re ready, you can reach out to schedule a consultation so we can help you make sense of your symptom story and next steps.

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Why do bowel symptoms worsen during my period?

It’s common for bowel symptoms to flare around your period because hormonal shifts can change how the bowel moves and how sensitive the pelvic nerves feel—and if you have endometriosis, those same shifts can amplify inflammation and pain. Endometriosis can affect the bowel directly (often the rectum/rectosigmoid) or irritate the tissues around it, so symptoms can feel “GI” even when the issue isn’t primarily inside the bowel. Scarring and tethering can also pull on the bowel as the uterus contracts during menstruation, making cramping, constipation/diarrhea swings, bloating, or pain with bowel movements more noticeable.


A cyclical pattern—especially pain with bowel movements during bleeding, rectal pressure, or rectal bleeding that tracks with your cycle—raises our suspicion for bowel involvement or deep disease behind the uterus. It’s also why some people have a normal colonoscopy yet still have significant symptoms, since endometriosis often affects the outer bowel surface or deeper layers rather than the inner lining a scope evaluates. If your symptoms are period-linked or progressively worsening, our team can help map what’s going on and talk through next-step evaluation and treatment options, including minimally invasive excision when appropriate.

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Reach Out

Have a question?

Dr. Steven Vasilev delivers best-in-class endometriosis guidance and a personalized treatment plan—built on evidence and your unique biology.


Led by Steven Vasilev, MD—an internationally recognized endometriosis specialist & MIGS surgeon—Lotus Endometriosis Institute is virtual-forward, with many patients traveling nationally for care. Clinical evaluation and surgical treatment are provided in California.

Santa Monica, CA

2121 Santa Monica Blvd, Santa Monica, CA 90404

Operating Hours

8:00 am - 5:00 pm
Monday - Friday

Arroyo Grande, CA

154 Traffic Way, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420