The Missing Piece in Endometriosis Treatment
If you have endometriosis, you probably know your options by heart: hormonal suppression or excision surgery. Maybe both. Maybe you have tried both and still have pain.
What almost nobody tells you is that endometriosis creates a secondary problem that neither hormones nor surgery fully addresses: chronic pelvic floor muscle tension.
This is not a fringe theory. It is one of the most well-documented aspects of chronic pelvic pain. And it is the reason why many women with endometriosis continue to have significant pain even after their disease is surgically removed.
How Endometriosis Changes Your Muscles
Your body is smart. When something in your pelvis is inflamed and painful — as endometriosis tissue is — the muscles surrounding it tighten up. This is a protective response called guarding. It is the same thing that happens when you pull a muscle in your back — the surrounding muscles clamp down to splint the area.
With endometriosis, this guarding is not a one-time event. The disease creates chronic inflammation, so the guarding becomes chronic. Over months and years, your pelvic floor muscles:
- Develop trigger points — hyper-irritable knots that produce referred pain
- Lose their ability to fully relax
- Create tension patterns that spread to your hips, low back, abdomen, and inner thighs
- Become a source of pain in their own right — separate from the disease itself
Eventually, you have two pain generators: the endometriosis and the muscle dysfunction it created. Surgery can remove the first. Hormones can suppress the first. But neither one addresses the second.
The 98% Correlation
Here is a clinical finding that Dr. Danaya uses in her practice: there is a 98% correlation between oblique trigger points and visceral abnormality in endometriosis patients.
In simpler terms: almost every woman with endometriosis has specific trigger points in her abdominal wall muscles — particularly the obliques — that correspond to where the disease is located internally. These trigger points are not random. They are the muscular response to the visceral disease.
This matters because it means these muscles can be assessed, treated, and released. And when they are, pelvic pain often decreases significantly — even though the endometriosis is still there.
Why Women Still Hurt After Surgery
One of the most frustrating experiences for endo patients is having excision surgery — the gold standard — and still being in pain afterward. The disease was removed. The surgeon confirmed they got it all. So why does it still hurt?
In many cases, the answer is the muscle tension that built up over years of living with the disease. Surgery removes the endometriosis. It does not reset the muscles.
Think of it like this: if you walked with a limp for five years because of a knee injury, and then you had surgery to fix the knee, you would not expect the limp to disappear overnight. Your muscles and movement patterns adapted over five years. They need rehabilitation to return to normal.
The same principle applies to your pelvic floor after endometriosis treatment. The disease may be gone, but the muscles are still in their protective, guarded, shortened state. They need specific treatment to release and retrain.
What Pelvic Floor PT for Endo Actually Involves
Treatment is focused on releasing the chronic tension, calming the nervous system, and restoring normal muscle function. It typically includes:
Internal and external manual therapy. Hands-on release of tight pelvic floor muscles, trigger points in the pelvic floor and abdominal wall, and fascial restrictions. This is often the most impactful part of treatment — directly addressing the muscles that have been in guarding mode.
Trigger point dry needling. For deep muscle tension that manual therapy alone cannot reach, dry needling can reset overactive muscles and break pain-tension cycles. Dr. Danaya uses this technique for the oblique and abdominal trigger points that are so common in endo patients. Learn more about dry needling →
Breathing and nervous system work. Chronic pain rewires your nervous system toward a heightened state of alert. Your diaphragm tightens, your breathing becomes shallow, and your entire pelvic region stays tense. Breathing retraining and nervous system calming techniques help reverse this pattern.
Hip, back, and abdominal treatment. Endometriosis pain does not stay in the pelvis. It spreads to the hips, low back, and abdomen through interconnected muscle chains. A thorough approach treats the entire region, not just the pelvic floor in isolation.
Pain education. Understanding what is causing your pain — and specifically understanding that muscle tension is a treatable component — is itself a powerful intervention. Many women with endo have been told their pain is just something they have to live with. Learning that a significant portion of it is muscular and addressable changes the entire equation.
PT Does Not Replace Medical Treatment
This is important to state clearly: pelvic floor PT is not a replacement for medical management of endometriosis. If you need surgery, PT is not a substitute. If hormonal management is helping you, PT does not replace it.
What PT does is address a different component of the problem. The muscular component. The one that hormones and surgery do not reach.
The best outcomes Dr. Danaya sees are in patients who are working with both their medical team and their PT — addressing the disease and the muscle dysfunction simultaneously. This is not either/or. It is both.
When to Start PT for Endometriosis
You do not need to wait for surgery or a specific stage of medical treatment to start pelvic floor PT. In fact, starting earlier often leads to better outcomes because the muscle tension has had less time to become deeply entrenched.
Good times to start:
- At any point during medical management — PT can reduce pain and improve quality of life alongside your current treatment
- Before surgery — reducing muscle tension beforehand may improve your surgical experience and recovery
- After surgery — addressing residual muscle tension and scar tissue from the procedure
- If you have chosen not to have surgery — PT is one of the most effective conservative options for managing endo-related pain
What Else PT Can Help With in Endo Patients
Endometriosis often comes with related symptoms that pelvic floor PT also treats:
- Painful intercourse — often caused by pelvic floor muscle tension, not just the disease itself
- Bowel dysfunction — constipation, painful bowel movements, and incomplete emptying related to pelvic floor tension
- Bladder urgency and frequency — pelvic floor tension around the bladder amplifies these symptoms
- Hip and back pain — referred pain from pelvic floor dysfunction
- Menstrual pain amplification — tight pelvic floor muscles make period cramps worse
The Bottom Line
Endometriosis is not just a hormonal or surgical problem. It creates real, measurable changes in your pelvic floor muscles that persist even after the disease is treated. These muscle changes are a significant source of pain — and they are treatable.
If you have endometriosis and your pain has not fully resolved with medical treatment, the answer may not be more surgery or different hormones. It may be that nobody has assessed and treated your pelvic floor.
If something here resonates, you don’t need to keep guessing.
We offer a free 15-minute consult to help you understand your symptoms and next steps. No pressure. Just clarity.
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— Allison M.