What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You About Endometriosis (And Why It Takes 10 Years to Diagnose)
If you have been told your period pain is normal, this episode is for you. Endometriosis affects an estimated one in nine women, yet the average diagnostic delay is still a staggering ten years. In this episode of Sana Sessions, we take a deep dive into what endometriosis actually is, why it is so frequently missed, and what a comprehensive, root-cause approach to management looks like, beyond the pill and beyond surgery.
What We Cover in This Episode
What is Endometriosis?
Endometriosis is a condition where endometrial-like tissue grows outside the uterus, responding to hormonal fluctuations throughout the menstrual cycle. It is not simply a gynaecological condition — it is a multisystem inflammatory disease involving immune dysfunction, hormonal imbalance, and cellular disruption. Symptoms can include severe period pain (dysmenorrhoea), ovulatory pain, pain with intercourse (dyspareunia), heavy periods (menorrhagia), chronic pelvic pain, digestive symptoms such as bloating and constipation, fatigue, recurrent urinary tract infections, and fertility challenges. Critically, symptom severity does not always reflect disease severity.
Why Endometriosis Takes So Long to Diagnose
Women's pain has historically been underrecognised and underinvestigated. Many women are told their symptoms are normal for years before receiving a diagnosis. Endometriosis can present during adolescence, the twenties and thirties, or may only be discovered during fertility investigations. Understanding your symptoms and advocating clearly within your healthcare team is essential.
How Endometriosis is Diagnosed
Laparoscopy remains the gold standard for diagnosis. Specialised imaging via an endoscan, a comprehensive ultrasound involving external abdominal and internal transvaginal assessment with pressure testing for adhesions, can detect deep infiltrating endometriosis and provides a less invasive diagnostic pathway.
The Root Causes of Endometriosis
This is where naturopathic medicine offers significant value. Rather than managing symptoms alone, a root-cause approach explores the multiple contributing factors driving the condition:
* Retrograde menstruation and bacterial contamination theory (E. coli endotoxins in menstrual blood and peritoneal fluid)
* Genetic predisposition involving genes that regulate inflammation, hormone metabolism, immune signalling, and tissue repair
* Epigenetic influences including diet, chronic stress, toxin exposure, gut health, and lifestyle patterns
* Environmental toxin exposure, particularly xenoestrogens and endocrine-disrupting chemicals found in plastics, soft plastics, and food packaging
* Impaired immune surveillance allowing abnormal cell implantation and growth
* Gut microbiome imbalance and its direct influence on immune regulation and oestrogen metabolism via the estrobolome
* Uterine microbiome disruption associated with endometriosis and implantation difficulties
* Elevated copper levels driving inflammation, oxidative stress, and angiogenesis that supports lesion growth
* Defective methylation pathways affecting detoxification, hormone metabolism, and inflammation regulation
* Elevated histamine activity amplifying inflammation, oestrogen stimulation, and pain signalling
Naturopathic Management of Endometriosis
A comprehensive, integrative approach to endometriosis management includes:
* Anti-inflammatory nutrition: whole foods, omega-3 fatty acids, diverse vegetables, fibre, and antioxidant-rich foods to reduce systemic inflammation
* Gut health optimisation: stool microbiome mapping, digestive function support, and gut barrier repair to support immune health and oestrogen clearance
* Methylation support: assessment of homocysteine, vitamin B12, folate, B6, choline, and magnesium to support detoxification and hormone metabolism
* Histamine management: identifying histamine-triggering foods, supporting gut integrity, and providing targeted nutrient support for histamine metabolism
* Nervous system regulation: breathwork, restorative movement such as walking and yoga, sleep support, and techniques such as legs-up-the-wall
* Environmental toxin reduction: avoiding heating food in plastic containers, switching to glass or stainless steel storage, and reducing soft plastic packaging exposure
* Targeted herbal and nutritional supplementation based on individual presentation
* Post-surgical support for tissue healing where excision has been performed
Building Your Endometriosis Healthcare Team
Managing endometriosis well requires a collaborative team. This may include your GP, a specialist gynaecologist experienced in endometriosis excision surgery, a pelvic floor physiotherapist, a naturopath, and an acupuncturist. Taking a support person to medical appointments can help with advocacy and information retention.
Key Takeaways
* Endometriosis is a multisystem inflammatory condition, not just a period problem
* A ten-year diagnostic delay is still common, knowing your symptoms and advocating for investigation matters
* Root causes extend well beyond hormones and include gut health, immune function, environmental toxins, methylation, and histamine
* Naturopathic support works alongside conventional treatment to address the systemic drivers of the condition
* An individualised, comprehensive approach produces the best outcomes
Mentioned in This Episode
* Endoscan (specialised endometriosis ultrasound)
* Gut microbiome mapping and stool analysis
* Methylation blood panel (homocysteine, B12, folate, B6, choline, magnesium)
* Estrobolome and oestrogen metabolism
* Endocrine-disrupting chemicals and xenoestrogens
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