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Adenomyosis Basics: What Is It and Why Is It Overlooked?

A patient-friendly guide to symptoms, diagnosis, and why answers take time

A flat vector illustration shows a misty forest with layered trees, a winding path, and a magnifying glass revealing hidden roots, symbolizing the elusive nature of adenomyosis diagnosis.

Adenomyosis is one of those diagnoses many people hear only after years of painful periods, heavy bleeding, or sub-fertility stress—often after being told their symptoms are “normal” or “just part of getting older.” If you’ve recently come across the term and feel confused (or dismissed), you’re not alone.


So, how common is it? Most information published seems to indicate that adenomyosis it is less common than endometriosis. In fact, it is often stated that it is only present in about 1% of women. The problem is that imaging is only about 70% sensitive in finding adenomyosis and the only way to know for sure is after the pathologist finds it on hysterectomy specimen evaluation. In most published papers adenomyosis is found in 20-25% of uteri, and as high in 60% in other studies. This means it is entirely plausible that adenomyosis is at least as common as—if not more far more common than—endometriosis in the general population.


Recent research across imaging, inflammation, and uterine muscle biology helps explain two things at once: what adenomyosis is inside the body, and why it’s so often missed. This article draws on multiple recent studies and reviews to give you a clear starting point—so you can recognize the condition, understand how it overlaps with endometriosis, and know what to ask for next.


What is adenomyosis, in plain language?


Adenomyosis happens when tissue similar to the uterine lining (endometrium) is found within the muscular wall of the uterus (the myometrium). Instead of staying where it normally belongs, this tissue can contribute to swelling, irritation, and—over time—changes in the uterine muscle itself.


A useful way to think about it is: adenomyosis isn’t only a “lesion problem.” It can become a whole-uterus environment problem, involving hormones, inflammation, how the normal endometrial uterine lining behaves, and the way the uterine muscle contracts.


Large overviews describe adenomyosis (and endometriosis) as chronic, hormone-dependent inflammatory diseases, with a major role for estrogen and a reduced ability of progesterone to “calm” the tissue (often called progesterone resistance). That hormone/inflammation mix helps explain why symptoms can be persistent and why long-term management is often needed rather than a one-time fix through some of the interventions available like surgery or microwave or freezing and so on.


Why adenomyosis can hurt: more than “just cramps”


Many people are simply told adenomyosis triggers “bad cramps,” but newer mechanistic research gives a much clearer explanation: adenomyosis may change how the uterine muscle behaves as a whole.


A 2026 study examining human uterine muscle tissue (and a mouse model) found patterns consistent with more fibrosis (scar-like stiffening) in adenomyosis, especially close to adenomyosis areas. Importantly, pain severity tracked with these tissue changes. The study linked worse period pain (dysmenorrhea) with:

  • More fibrosis and higher oxytocin receptor signaling (signals that can promote stronger contractions)
  • Lower activity in a pathway that supports muscle relaxation via nitric oxide (NO)


In simple terms, this line of sceintific evidence supports an idea many patients recognize: the pain may come from a uterus that is not only inflamed, but also more “irritable” and hypercontractile—contracting more strongly or irregularly. This doesn’t change today’s standard diagnosis, but it helps validate that adenomyosis pain can have a real, physical driver beyond a generic “sensitivity” explanation.


Common symptoms—and why symptoms don’t always “match” the scans


Adenomyosis is often associated with:

  • Heavy menstrual bleeding
  • Severe period pain
  • Pelvic pressure or bloating
  • Painful sex in some cases
  • Bowel/bladder discomfort for some people
  • Fertility challenges for some people


But symptoms vary widely. One reason adenomyosis is overlooked is that symptoms overlap with multiple conditions—fibroids, endometriosis, pelvic floor pain, irritable bowel syndrome, bladder pain syndrome—and sometimes multiple issues exist at the same time.


Research also suggests that coexisting adenomyosis and endometriosis is common, and that having both can worsen symptoms and complicate fertility. In one small 2026 pilot study of people with endometriosis, a large proportion also had imaging-diagnosed adenomyosis, and adenomyosis clustered strongly with another inflammatory condition (more on that below). While that study is too small to set rules, it reinforces a practical point: if you have persistent symptoms, it may not be “either/or.”


Why adenomyosis is often missed


1) The diagnosis used to depend on hysterectomy pathology


As mentioned already, adenomyosis is often “confirmed” only after hysterectomy, because the diagnosis was historically based on what a pathologist saw in the uterine muscle. That automatically biased understanding toward people with severe symptoms who ended up with a hysterectomy or those who were done with childbearing.


Modern reviews emphasize that prevalence is still uncertain partly because criteria have not always been standardized and many older studies relied on hysterectomy specimens. When imaging-based criteria are used, it appears that adenomyosis maybe far more common than many people were taught—on the order of around one in five in some ultrasound cohorts, and even higher in specific selected groups. That doesn’t mean one in five people will have severe symptoms; it means adenomyosis-like changes may be present more often than previously recognized.


2) Imaging quality and expertise matter a lot


Transvaginal ultrasound (TVUS) and MRI can be very helpful, but adenomyosis diagnosis is not just “did you get an ultrasound.” It’s also: was it done and interpreted by someone trained to look for adenomyosis features? There are different variations like central and diffuse, among other categories.


A 2025 review highlights that skilled imaging can diagnose endometriosis without surgery in many cases and discusses imaging as central for adenomyosis as well—reflecting a broader shift away from “you need surgery to know.” But in real life, access to expert ultrasound or adenomyosis-focused MRI protocols can be uneven, which contributes to delays.


3) Symptoms are normalized—especially painful periods


Research on endometriosis repeatedly documents long diagnostic delays (often years). While adenomyosis-specific delays aren’t always measured the same way, many patients experience a similar pattern: symptoms begin earlier, but the diagnosis comes later—sometimes after fertility evaluation, worsening bleeding, or repeated “normal” tests.


The underlying issue is not that patients failed to report symptoms; it’s that the healthcare system often underestimates pelvic pain and heavy bleeding, and adenomyosis hasn’t been emphasized in general training as much as other conditions. It is less often considered than endometriosis, which already lacks awareness in the general medical community.


4) Adenomyosis can be diffuse and subtle


Unlike a single visible fibroid, adenomyosis can be diffuse, blending into the muscle and changing the junction between the lining and the muscle (often called the junctional zone). That makes it harder to spot, harder to describe consistently, and easier to miss unless someone is looking for the pattern.


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Is adenomyosis caused by hormones? inflammation? something you’re born with?


Most experts now describe adenomyosis as multifactorial—not one single cause. Several research themes help explain why:

  • Hormones and inflammation: Reviews consistently frame adenomyosis as estrogen-influenced with inflammatory signaling. This helps explain why hormonal treatments often help symptoms, even if they don’t “erase” the condition.
  • Uterine muscle changes over time: Tissue studies suggest a cycle where inflammation and micro-injury may contribute to fibrosis and abnormal contractions, which may then worsen pain.
  • Possible developmental influences: A 2026 case–control study explored whether a specific body measurement called anogenital distance (AGD) differed in people with adenomyosis. One AGD measurement was, on average, shorter in the adenomyosis group, and the measurement reliability was strong. However, the ability to distinguish individuals with and without adenomyosis was only fair—meaning there was substantial overlap and it’s not useful as a stand-alone screen. Still, it contributes to a broader hypothesis that early-life developmental factors might influence risk in some people.


The most important patient takeaway: adenomyosis is not something you “caused” by doing the wrong workout, using tampons, or missing a supplement. The biology being studied points toward complex interactions between hormones, immune signaling, tissue repair, and possibly genetic predisposition.


Adenomyosis vs. endometriosis: what’s the difference (and why it matters)?


They’re related, and they can coexist, but they are not the same condition.

  • Adenomyosis: lining-like tissue within the uterine muscle; tends to be tied to heavy bleeding and a globally “angry” uterus.
  • Endometriosis: endometrial-like tissue outside the uterus (pelvis and sometimes beyond); often tied to pelvic pain, bowel/bladder pain, and infertility, depending on location.


Both are described in modern reviews as chronic inflammatory and estrogen-influenced, and both may involve progesterone resistance. The reason this matters is practical: if you only treat one condition (or only look for one), symptoms may persist.


Fertility: why adenomyosis can affect implantation and miscarriage risk


Adenomyosis is not just a “pain condition.” Multiple lines of evidence summarized in a 2026 review link adenomyosis to lower pregnancy rates and higher miscarriage risk, including in IVF/ICSI settings.


One key concept is the junctional zone, the interface between the lining and the muscle. The review describes this zone as important for both coordinated uterine contractions and immune regulation. When it becomes thickened or inflamed, the uterus may develop abnormal peristalsis (movement) and a less receptive environment for implantation. Inflammation-related molecules (cytokines such as IL‑6 and others) are repeatedly implicated as part of this environment, which also results in an inflamed endometrium. This inflammation means a more hostile environment for durable embryo implantation, resulting in no pregnancy or early miscarriages.


A practical nuance: not everyone with adenomyosis has infertility. But the evidence suggests that severity and the number of imaging features may matter, meaning “mild features” and “more extensive disease” can have different implications. This is exactly the kind of detail worth asking your clinician to interpret with you.


A “newer” overlap to know about: chronic endometritis (CE)


Chronic endometritis (CE) is a specific kind of inflammation inside the uterine lining diagnosed by biopsy and specialized staining (often looking for plasma cells with a marker called CD138). It’s not the same thing as adenomyosis, and it can’t be diagnosed from symptoms alone.


In a small 2026 pilot study in people with endometriosis, CE was common—and notably, adenomyosis was strongly clustered among those with CE. That doesn’t prove CE causes adenomyosis (or vice versa), and it doesn’t mean everyone with adenomyosis needs a biopsy. But it raises a patient-relevant possibility: for some people—especially those with infertility, recurrent implantation failure, or persistent symptoms—providers may increasingly consider whether an additional, treatable inflammatory factor is present.


Of note, BCL6 (via Receptiva testing) is a biomarker for endometriosis, not endometritis, though recent evidence shows it may also be elevated in adenomyosis. These are distinct diagnostic tests for different conditions. However, especially since endometriosis and adenomyosis often coexist, this is another pathway for sub-fertility and should be explored with your doctor. To be complete, the science behind testing and impact on fertility is imprecise. So, some reproductive endocrinologists (REI) advocate for this type of testing and others do not.


Practical takeaways: how to advocate for yourself now


  • If you suspect adenomyosis, consider asking for adenomyosis-focused imaging (TVUS by an experienced sonographer and/or MRI when appropriate), not just “any ultrasound.”
  • If you have endometriosis—or symptoms suggestive of it—ask whether your clinician has considered both endometriosis and adenomyosis, since coexistence is common.
  • If fertility is a concern, ask your specialist to describe how extensive adenomyosis looks on imaging (e.g., diffuse vs focal patterns, junctional zone findings), because severity may influence expectations and planning.


Questions to ask your doctor

  • “Do my symptoms and imaging suggest adenomyosis, endometriosis, or both?”
  • “Was my ultrasound/MRI interpreted using standardized adenomyosis criteria and by someone experienced in it?”
  • “Do my imaging features suggest mild vs more extensive adenomyosis and is it central or diffuse—and what does that mean for pain, bleeding, or fertility?”
  • “Given my goals (pain control, bleeding control, pregnancy), what are the next steps to confirm the diagnosis and start treatment?”
  • “In my situation, is there any reason to evaluate for other contributors like fibroids, pelvic floor dysfunction, or (in select fertility cases) chronic endometritis?”


What we still don’t know


Even with better imaging and stronger biological models, adenomyosis research still has gaps:

  • No single cause explains all cases. Hormones, immune factors, tissue repair/fibrosis, and possibly developmental influences may all play roles.
  • Not all imaging features predict symptoms perfectly. Some people have significant symptoms with subtle imaging, and others have imaging features with fewer symptoms.
  • Many proposed biomarkers aren’t ready for clinic yet. Reviews discuss inflammatory cytokines as potential tests and even future anti-cytokine therapies, but these are not validated, routine tools right now.
  • Smaller studies can hint at important overlaps (like CE), but larger, diverse studies are needed to know who benefits from added testing or targeted treatment.


Adenomyosis basics—what it is and why it’s overlooked—often come down to this: it’s common, real, and biologically complex, yet historically under-recognized. The good news is that presumptive diagnosis is increasingly possible without surgery, and understanding is rapidly improving. In the next posts in this series, we’ll build from this foundation into symptoms, diagnosis pathways, and the full range of treatment options (including what to consider if pregnancy is a goal).

References

  1. Martire, Costantini, D’Abate et al.. Endometriosis and Adenomyosis: From Pathogenesis to Follow-Up. Current Issues in Molecular Biology. 2025. PMID: 40699697 PMCID: PMC12110143

  2. Guzelbag, Bestel, Katran et al.. Shorter Anogenital Distance in Women with Adenomyosis Diagnosed by MUSA 2022 Criteria: A Prospective Case–Control Study. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2026. PMID: 41753007 PMCID: PMC12941305

  3. Luna Arana, Pereira Sánchez, Vaquero Argüello et al.. The Role of Chronic Endometritis in Endometriosis: A Personalized Diagnostic Tool?. Journal of Personalized Medicine. 2026. PMID: 41745366 PMCID: PMC12942335

  4. Yang, Li, Cao et al.. Mechanistic insights into inflammatory cytokines in adenomyosis-induced infertility (Review). International Journal of Molecular Medicine. 2026. PMID: 41789648 PMCID: PMC12959618

  5. Yan, Wang, Liu et al.. Impaired PIEZO1 function drives uterine hypercontractility in adenomyosis-associated dysmenorrhea. Human Reproduction Open. 2026. PMCID: PMC12981915

Quick Answers

When is menstrual bleeding considered too heavy?

Menstrual flow is generally “too heavy” when it consistently disrupts your life or overwhelms your usual period products—think flooding or soaking through pads/tampons quickly, passing frequent or large clots, needing to double up, or bleeding long enough that you can’t plan around it. Another major clue is fatigue, dizziness, or shortness of breath that can come with iron deficiency from ongoing blood loss. If you’re timing your day around bathrooms, waking at night to change products, or avoiding work, exercise, travel, or sex because of bleeding, that’s not something we consider “normal.”


Heavy bleeding is a symptom, not a diagnosis, and common underlying drivers include adenomyosis, fibroids, hormonal imbalance, and sometimes endometriosis—especially when heavy bleeding shows up with severe cramps or deep pelvic pain. Because imaging and symptoms don’t always match (a scan can look “mild” while symptoms are intense), we take a symptom-led approach and look at the full pattern, including pain, pressure, clots, cycle timing, and any signs of anemia. If your bleeding feels like it’s escalating or you’ve been told to “just live with it,” our team can help you sort out likely causes and build a plan that targets the source—not just the bleeding.

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Can endometriosis cause arthritis-like joint pain?

Yes—endometriosis can be associated with arthritis-like joint pain in some people, even though joint pain isn’t considered a classic “core” symptom. Endometriosis can drive chronic inflammation and immune dysregulation, and that whole-body inflammatory state may show up as aching, stiffness, or flares that feel similar to inflammatory arthritis. Some patients also notice joint symptoms that cycle with their period or worsen during broader endometriosis flares.


At the same time, endometriosis doesn’t “equal” autoimmune arthritis, and an association doesn’t prove that one causes the other. Research suggests higher rates of certain autoimmune conditions in people with endometriosis—including inflammatory diseases that can affect joints—so persistent joint pain deserves a full-picture evaluation rather than being automatically attributed to pelvic disease alone. If you’re dealing with pelvic pain plus joint symptoms, our team can help you sort out what fits endometriosis, what may be a related immune condition, and how that affects your treatment plan, including whether excision surgery and coordinated integrative support make sense for you.

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How does estrogen affect the endometrium?

Estrogen is one of the main hormones that drives endometrial growth. In the first half of the menstrual cycle, rising estrogen signals the endometrium to thicken and rebuild after a period, preparing the uterus for a possible pregnancy. It also influences the local immune and inflammatory environment in the uterus, which is part of why hormonal shifts can change bleeding patterns and pain.


When estrogen’s growth signals are strong—and progesterone’s “calming” effect is weaker than expected (often described as progesterone resistance)—the endometrium can behave in a more persistently inflamed, reactive way. This hormone–inflammation pattern is especially relevant in estrogen-dependent conditions like adenomyosis and endometriosis, where tissue similar to the endometrium can contribute to ongoing symptoms. If you’re trying to make sense of heavy bleeding, severe cramping, or cycle-linked pelvic pain, our team can help you connect the hormonal biology to what you’re feeling and review next steps for diagnosis and treatment.

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What does advanced adenomyosis mean?

“Advanced adenomyosis” usually means the adenomyosis is more extensive within the uterine muscle—often involving a larger area (diffuse disease), deeper penetration into the myometrium, and/or more pronounced changes like uterine enlargement and tenderness. It’s not the same as “advanced endometriosis,” because adenomyosis doesn’t spread outside the uterus; “advanced” is more about how much of the uterine wall appears affected and how significantly it’s impacting symptoms.


Because adenomyosis doesn’t have a single universally accepted staging system, different clinicians and radiology reports may use “advanced” to summarize imaging features (ultrasound or MRI) and the overall clinical picture—such as heavy bleeding, severe period pain, pelvic pressure, or fertility challenges. In our practice, we focus less on the label and more on what your imaging suggests (diffuse vs focal/adenomyoma, junctional zone changes, uterine size) and what your goals are (pain control, bleeding control, fertility preservation, or definitive treatment). If you’ve been told you have “advanced adenomyosis,” our team can help you interpret what that means in your specific case and map out next steps.

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How long do endometriosis flare-ups last?

Endometriosis flare-ups don’t have one “usual” length—some people feel a spike in symptoms for a few hours to a couple of days, while others have flares that stretch across an entire cycle window or blend into more constant pain. Many flares track with hormonal shifts (often before and during a period), but bowel, bladder, pelvic floor, or nerve-related pain can flare at different times and may not follow a neat calendar pattern.


When flares start lasting longer or happening more often, it can be a sign that multiple pain drivers are stacking—ongoing inflammation from lesions, adhesions/fibrosis that can “tether” organs, and sometimes central sensitization, where the nervous system becomes more reactive over time. That’s why symptom management alone can feel like a band-aid if active disease is still present. If you’re noticing prolonged, unpredictable, or escalating flares, our team can help you map your pattern, identify what’s likely driving it, and discuss a plan that addresses both symptom control and the underlying endometriosis.

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