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What tests can explain pain after endometriosis surgery?
Persistent or new pain after excision surgery can come from a few different “lanes”—normal healing in the first weeks, pain that never fully improved, or pain that improves and later returns. The most helpful “test” often starts with a structured review of your pain pattern (timing, triggers like bowel/bladder/sex/movement, exact location, and the quality—cramping vs burning/electric), because that determines what we look for next rather than ordering a one-size-fits-all panel.
From there, we typically use expertly interpreted pelvic imaging such as ultrasound and/or MRI to look for residual or recurrent endometriosis, adenomyosis, pelvic masses, and other pelvic drivers that can mimic endo pain. Depending on your symptoms, we may also evaluate for overlap conditions that commonly keep pain going after surgery—pelvic floor dyssynergia, hernias, pelvic venous congestion or May-Thurner patterns, bladder/bowel sensitization, and nerve-related contributors like small fiber neuropathy or central sensitization.
In selected cases, testing can go beyond imaging to clarify biology and personalize next steps, including targeted lab work for thyroid dysfunction, PCOS or adrenal imbalance, autoimmune overlap, and sometimes gut-related factors like dysbiosis/SIBO that can amplify inflammation and pain. When we have excised tissue available, specialized pathology markers (such as mitotic index, mast cell density, immune/molecular markers, and hormone receptor profiling) can add an extra layer of insight into why symptoms may persist and how to tailor a long-term plan. If you share your surgical history and current symptom pattern with our team, we can help map which evaluations are most likely to be high-yield for you—without guesswork.

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At the Lotus Endometriosis Institute, evaluation begins with listening. Our diagnostic process uncovers the true source of pain and related conditions often missed elsewhere.
Pain Management
Learn how evidence-based pain management for endometriosis can provide real relief while addressing root causes through integrative care.
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