Gynecology

Endometriosis and Fertility: What Every Woman Should Know

Dr. Priya Shankar, senior gynecologist at Srishti SAFE

Endometriosis is one of the most under-recognised gynecological conditions in India. Women suffer with it for an average of 7-10 years before diagnosis — long years of being told "periods are supposed to hurt", "it's just stress", or "you'll feel better after marriage". Many only learn what they have when they try to conceive and can't.

Here's what endometriosis is, how it affects fertility, and what to do about it.

What endometriosis actually is

The lining of the uterus (the endometrium) is supposed to be inside the uterus. In endometriosis, tissue similar to that lining grows in places it shouldn't — usually on the ovaries, fallopian tubes, the outer surface of the uterus, the bowel, the bladder, or pelvic peritoneum.

This misplaced tissue still responds to monthly hormonal cycles. It thickens, bleeds, and tries to shed — but unlike normal menstrual blood, it has nowhere to go. The result: chronic inflammation, scarring, adhesions, and cysts. Over time these changes affect the entire pelvic environment.

The symptoms — including the ones that get dismissed

Period pain that requires pain medication every month is not normal. Mild discomfort is normal. Severe pain that interferes with school, work, or daily life is a clue worth investigating — at any age.

How it affects fertility

Endometriosis affects fertility through multiple mechanisms — which is why even "mild" endometriosis can have outsized effect:

About 30-50% of women with endometriosis experience some degree of subfertility. The reverse is also true: 20-30% of women with infertility turn out to have endometriosis.

How it's diagnosed

Treatment depends on your priority

This is where decisions get personal. The right path depends on whether your current priority is pain management, fertility, or both.

If your priority is fertility

If your priority is pain (and pregnancy is later)

One important detail: hormonal suppression treats symptoms but doesn't improve fertility. If pregnancy is the goal, suppressing the disease is sometimes counterproductive.

The role of laparoscopic surgery

Minimally invasive surgery — done at most fertility-focused clinics including ours — is the most effective single intervention for many endometriosis cases. A skilled surgeon can remove visible disease, restore anatomy, free trapped ovaries, and clear adhesions. Recovery is quick (back to normal in 1-2 weeks).

But surgery has costs: it's invasive, anaesthesia is involved, repeat surgeries get progressively less useful (each one reduces ovarian reserve a little). The decision to operate vs. proceed to IVF should be made together.

A note on the journey

Endometriosis is genuinely under-treated in India — partly cultural, partly because it requires specialist input. If you've been told for years that your period pain is "normal" and now you're struggling to conceive, this might be your missing diagnosis.

Both Dr. Shankar and I do laparoscopic surgery for endometriosis as well as the fertility planning that follows. The two skill sets are complementary — and increasingly, patients are coming to us with disease that's been mismanaged elsewhere.

If anything in this article reflected your experience — pain, irregular cycles, repeated treatment failures, "unexplained" infertility — a single consultation can either rule out or confirm endometriosis as part of the picture.

Dr. Priya Shankar

Dr. Priya Shankar

Senior obstetrician, gynecologist and fertility specialist. Particular interest in endometriosis, gynecological endoscopy and high-risk pregnancy.

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