Endometriosis cannot be fully “cured,” but it can usually be managed well with a mix of medications, surgery, and lifestyle changes tailored to your symptoms and whether you want to preserve fertility. Below is a clear, up‑to‑date overview of how to treat endometriosis in 2026.

Quick Scoop

  • Treatment focuses on relieving pain, slowing growth of tissue, and protecting fertility when possible.
  • Options include painkillers, hormonal therapies (like the Pill or IUDs), and surgery , often used in combination.
  • Many people also add diet, exercise, heat, and pelvic‑floor therapy to ease symptoms.

Main medical treatments

1. Pain relief

  • Over‑the‑counter NSAIDs (like ibuprofen) and paracetamol are often first‑line for cramps and pelvic pain.
  • Stronger prescription painkillers may be used short‑term if simple medicines aren’t enough.

2. Hormonal treatments

These work by suppressing ovulation and periods , which slows endometriosis growth and reduces pain for many people.

Common options:

  • Combined hormonal contraceptives :
    • Pill, patch, or vaginal ring that lowers estrogen and makes periods lighter or absent.
  • Progestogen‑only methods :
    • Progestogen‑only pills, implants, or injections (e.g., Depo‑Provera).
  • Levonorgestrel‑releasing IUD (e.g., Mirena):
    • Placed in the uterus; often reduces heavy bleeding and pelvic pain.
  • GnRH analogues and similar drugs (e.g., Zoladex, Decapeptyl, elagolix/Orilissa):
    • Temporarily induce a “menopause‑like” state to shrink lesions; usually limited to months to years because of side effects.

3. Surgery

Surgery is usually considered if pain is severe, medicines fail, or there is infertility or large cysts (endometriomas).

  • Laparoscopy (key‑hole surgery) :
    • The gold‑standard procedure; the surgeon removes or destroys endometriosis lesions (excision or ablation).
  • Endometrioma (ovarian cyst) surgery :
    • Large or painful cysts are often removed; small, asymptomatic ones may just be watched with ultrasounds.
  • Hysterectomy (removal of uterus, sometimes ovaries) :
    • Reserved for severe, treatment‑resistant cases, often when childbearing is complete.

Lifestyle and complementary approaches

Many people report better day‑to‑day control when they combine medical treatment with self‑care.

  • Heat and physical comfort :
    • Heating pads, warm baths, and gentle pelvic massage can relax muscles and ease cramping.
  • Diet and inflammation :
    • Eating more fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and omega‑3s (fatty fish, flaxseed) and cutting back on red meat and ultra‑processed foods may help some people feel better.
  • Exercise and pelvic‑floor therapy :
    • Regular low‑impact movement (walking, yoga, swimming) plus pelvic‑floor physiotherapy can reduce pain and improve function, especially after surgery.
  • Stress management :
    • Mindfulness, breathing exercises, and counseling can help with chronic‑pain coping and mental‑health strain.

What’s trending in care (2025–2026)

  • More emphasis on multidisciplinary care (gynecologists, pain specialists, pelvic‑floor physiotherapists, and mental‑health support) rather than “one‑size‑fits‑all” hormone‑only plans.
  • Growing interest in neuromuscular and pelvic‑rehab protocols after excision surgery to tackle remaining nerve‑related and muscle‑related pain.
  • Online forums and advocacy groups are pushing for earlier diagnosis and more patient‑led decision‑making , highlighting that “normal period pain” should not be dismissed.

Example treatment paths (simplified)

Situation| Typical approach
---|---
Mild pain, no fertility issues| NSAIDs + combined oral contraceptive or progestogen‑only method. 135
Moderate–severe pain, lesions confirmed| Laparoscopic excision plus hormonal maintenance (e.g., IUD or Pill). 357
Infertility + endometriosis| Surgery to remove lesions plus fertility‑sparing hormones or assisted reproduction (IVF). 57
Very severe, no desire for more children| Surgery (possibly hysterectomy ± ovary removal) after exhausting other options. 37

Important cautions

  • No single treatment guarantees symptom relief , and some people need to try several combinations over time.
  • Hormonal and surgical treatments have side effects and risks (e.g., bone‑density loss with long‑term GnRH, surgical complications), so decisions should be individualized with a specialist.
  • If you ever feel dismissed or unsafe talking to a provider, it’s reasonable to seek a second opinion or an endometriosis‑experienced clinic.

If you tell me your age, whether you’re trying to get pregnant, and how bad your pain is, I can outline a more personalized “how to treat endometriosis” plan that fits your situation.