You suspect you may have endometriosis or adenomyosis
How fast does endometriosis grow?


Endometriosis doesn’t grow at one predictable “rate.” It’s a heterogeneous condition—meaning different subtypes and lesion types can behave very differently—so one person may have slow, relatively stable disease while another has more biologically aggressive, invasive lesions that progress faster. Growth is influenced by where it is (surface vs deeper tissues or organs), the local inflammatory environment, and hormone signaling (including local estrogen activity and reduced progesterone response).
What most people notice first isn’t literal growth you can feel happening day-to-day, but changing symptoms over months or years—new bowel or bladder symptoms, worsening pain, or the appearance/enlargement of an endometrioma on imaging. It’s also why “stage” doesn’t reliably predict pain, and why a normal exam (or even normal imaging) doesn’t rule out active disease, especially with deep infiltrating endometriosis. If you’re trying to understand whether your symptoms suggest progression, our team can help you connect your symptom pattern with the most likely disease types and next diagnostic steps, and discuss when strategic excision surgery is appropriate.
Don’t wait for it to “grow.”
Deep endometriosis can progress unpredictably and symptoms don’t always match what’s happening inside. Our specialists can assess for deep disease, explain your risk, and plan the right imaging and treatment next steps.
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Evaluation & Diagnosis
At the Lotus Endometriosis Institute, evaluation begins with listening. Our diagnostic process uncovers the true source of pain and related conditions often missed elsewhere.
Endometriosis & Adenomyosis Services
Explore comprehensive endometriosis and adenomyosis services, including advanced diagnosis, robotic excision surgery, and integrative care at Lotus Endometriosis Institute.


