You are recovering after treatment
When can I restart hormones after endometriosis surgery?
In most cases, hormone therapy can be restarted soon after endometriosis surgery—often once we’re confident you’re past the immediate post-op healing phase and any bleeding or surgical-site irritation is settling. The right timing depends on what procedure you had (simple excision vs bowel/bladder work), how your recovery is going, and your goals (pain control, cycle management, fertility planning). We also consider what hormone you’re restarting, since options like continuous birth control or progestin-based therapy are used differently than deeper estrogen-suppressing medications.
It’s also important to frame why you’re restarting: hormones may help quiet symptoms and can be part of a strategy to reduce recurrence risk, but they don’t “heal” endometriosis on their own. If you’re considering stronger estrogen-suppressing medications (like GnRH analogs), we plan that thoughtfully because they’re not designed for long-term use and can carry meaningful side effects. If you tell us what you were on before surgery and what symptoms you’re trying to prevent, our team can help you choose a timeline and post-op plan that supports healing and longer-lasting relief—reach out to schedule a follow-up or consultation so we can tailor it to you.

Related Questions
Related Symptoms
Learn More

Should You Try Hormone Therapy Before Endometriosis Surgery?
Explore the benefits of hormone therapy before endometriosis surgery. Learn about GnRH agonists and their impact on pain and recovery.

Non-hormonal Options for Endometriosis Pain: What’s Actually Worth Trying?
Discover evidence-based nonhormonal treatments for endometriosis pain. Find options you can try now for effective symptom management.
Questions About Your Recovery?
Post-treatment care is essential. Our team provides comprehensive follow-up to support your recovery journey.
Schedule a Consultation

