For many patients, fertility struggles and endometriosis go hand in hand, yet most are never told why. Even with “normal” imaging or mild disease, conceiving can feel confusing, frustrating, and emotionally overwhelming.
In this in-depth guide, Dr. Faraj Touchan, MD, Endometriosis Excision Surgeon at PRM, explains how endometriosis affects fertility, when to seek help, and how expert excision and pelvic rehabilitation work together to support the healthiest possible reproductive environment.
Dr. Touchan explains that endometriosis can impact fertility in three main ways — and you don’t need severe disease for these effects to occur.
Endometriosis can cause scarring, inflammation, adhesions, and endometriomas that physically distort the reproductive organs.
This means:
Fallopian tubes can become kinked or stuck
Ovaries can adhere to the pelvic sidewall
Endometriomas can take over healthy ovarian tissue
Organs can be pulled out of their normal position
When the anatomy is altered, the egg and sperm simply cannot meet as they should. The ovary may not release the egg properly, and the tube may not be able to pick it up, making conception far more difficult.
Endometriosis is not just a period condition, it is an inflammatory disease.
Even when an ultrasound or MRI looks normal, the pelvis can be filled with:
Cytokines
Oxidative stress
Inflammatory toxins
This environment can:
Damage eggs
Reduce sperm motility
Interfere with fertilization
Lower embryo quality during IVF
This is why even “mild” or invisible endometriosis can impact fertility: the surrounding chemistry is disrupted, even if the anatomy looks normal.
Endometriomas and chronic inflammation can slowly destroy healthy ovarian tissue. Over time, this can:
Lower AMH
Reduce the number of available eggs
Accelerate the natural decline in ovarian reserve
Dr. Touchan emphasizes that proper expert excision can help — while poor surgery or repeated cyst drainage can actually remove healthy ovarian tissue and worsen outcomes.
Patients trying to conceive should watch for symptoms such as:
Severe menstrual pain
Pain with intercourse
Chronic pelvic pain between periods
Painful bowel movements or constipation around menstruation
Urinary pain or frequency that worsens during periods
Heavy or irregular periods
Ovarian cysts that may be endometriomas
A family history of endometriosis
Even without symptoms, unexplained infertility after a full workup is enough reason to suspect endometriosis.
The standard fertility timeline does not apply to patients with endometriosis.
Dr. Touchan recommends:
If under 35: Don’t wait 12 months. Seek evaluation after 6 months of trying.
If 35 or older: Seek evaluation right away.
If you have an endometrioma or severe symptoms: See a specialist immediately.
Because endometriosis is a progressive disease, delaying evaluation can further impact ovarian reserve and reproductive outcomes.
Dr. Touchan shares a key insight:
There is a 6–12 month window after expert excision when fertility is at its highest.
During this period:
Inflammation is significantly reduced
Pelvic anatomy is restored
Ovaries function more effectively
The reproductive environment is at its healthiest
Patients cleared after surgery should begin trying to conceive during this window, or move promptly to IUI/IVF based on age and ovarian reserve.
Dr. Touchan confirms that treating pelvic floor dysfunction and pelvic inflammation, the core of PRM’s protocol, can absolutely improve fertility outcomes.
Pelvic rehabilitation can:
Relax hypertonic pelvic floor muscles
Improve blood flow to the ovaries and uterus
Reduce nerve irritation and pelvic congestion
Restore pelvic organ mobility
Improve intercourse comfort and frequency
Lower inflammation in the pelvic microenvironment
These benefits support both natural conception and assisted reproduction (IUI/IVF).
After excision surgery, pelvic rehabilitation can enhance the fertility window by reducing inflammation and optimizing pelvic mobility and function.
According to Dr. Touchan, the best fertility outcomes occur when both sides of the problem are treated:
Expert excision surgery
→ Removes disease and restores structure
→ Reduces inflammation, improves mobility, calms the pelvic floor, and restores function
Together, they create the healthiest possible environment for conception and long-term pelvic healing.
Endometriosis can make the journey to pregnancy feel overwhelming, but you are not alone, and you are not out of options.
With the right diagnosis, the right treatment plan, and a team that looks at the whole picture, real healing and real possibilities are within reach.
If you’re struggling to conceive or feel like something isn’t right, you deserve to be heard, believed, and guided toward answers that finally make sense.