Pain during sexual intercourse — dyspareunia — is experienced by a significant proportion of women at some point in their lives, yet it remains one of the most underreported symptoms in gynecologic care. Women do not bring it up because they are embarrassed, because they have been told it is normal, because they assume nothing can be done, or because prior attempts to raise it were met with inadequate clinical attention. None of those are good reasons to continue without evaluation.
Dyspareunia has a range of identifiable causes — structural, hormonal, inflammatory, and musculoskeletal — and most of those causes are treatable. The specific cause determines the specific treatment, which is why the distinction between superficial pain (at the vaginal opening) and deep pain (within the pelvis) is clinically important. These two types of dyspareunia reflect different underlying mechanisms and point toward different diagnostic pathways.
This page explains the most common causes of painful intercourse in women, how the evaluation process works, and what treatment options are available. If you have been managing pain during intercourse without a satisfying explanation or adequate treatment, this page is the starting point for understanding that a different outcome is possible.
The location and character of pain during intercourse are the most important clinical features for identifying its cause. The following descriptions help distinguish between the two primary types of dyspareunia and the symptom patterns associated with each.
Superficial Dyspareunia — Pain at the Vaginal Opening
- Burning, stinging, or sharp pain at the vaginal opening or outer vagina during initial penetration
- Pain that persists after intercourse as a burning or raw sensation
- Vaginal dryness or inadequate lubrication that contributes to friction and pain
- Pain associated with vaginal atrophy — common during perimenopause and after menopause
- Pain accompanied by vaginal itching, discharge, or odor suggesting infection
- Involuntary tightening or spasm of the vaginal muscles that prevents comfortable penetration
- Skin irritation, redness, or visible changes at the vulvar introitus
Deep Dyspareunia — Pain Within the Pelvis
- Deep pelvic pain or aching with penetration — felt internally rather than at the vaginal opening
- Pain that is specifically worse with deep penetration or certain positions
- A cramping or stabbing quality that occurs during or after intercourse
- Pain that persists for hours after intercourse ends — a prolonged deep pelvic aching
- Pain that is worse in the days before or during menstruation — a cyclical pattern
- Pain associated with other pelvic symptoms including heavy periods, pelvic pressure, or chronic pelvic pain
- Pain that has been progressively worsening over time
Both types of dyspareunia are clinically significant and warrant evaluation. Superficial pain and deep pain frequently coexist, and a woman may experience both simultaneously from different underlying causes. The evaluation at Lapeer Women’s Health considers both components.
Most dyspareunia is appropriately addressed through a scheduled evaluation. Contact our office the same day if intercourse or pelvic examination is accompanied by:
- New pelvic pain with fever, unusual discharge, or signs of infection
- Significant vaginal bleeding after intercourse that is outside your normal pattern
- Sudden severe pelvic pain during or after intercourse unlike anything previously experienced
Lapeer: (810) 969-4670 · Rochester Hills: (248) 923-3522
Dyspareunia arises from different mechanisms depending on whether it is superficial or deep — and the appropriate treatment depends directly on identifying which mechanism is responsible.
Endometriosis — The Most Common Cause of Deep Dyspareunia
Deep dyspareunia is one of the most consistently reported symptoms of endometriosis, particularly when endometriosis involves the uterosacral ligaments, the posterior cul-de-sac, or the rectovaginal septum. These structures are directly stimulated by deep penetration during intercourse, and when they are infiltrated by endometriosis, that stimulation produces the characteristic deep aching or stabbing pain that persists long after intercourse ends. The pain is frequently worst in the days before and during menstruation, when endometriosis implants are most inflamed. Deep dyspareunia that is cyclically worse around menstruation is highly suggestive of endometriosis and warrants specific evaluation. Learn more about endometriosis →
Uterine Fibroids
Fibroids that are located posteriorly — on the back surface of the uterus — or that significantly enlarge the uterus can produce deep pelvic pain during intercourse through mechanical pressure. The uterus itself may be pushed against posterior structures during penetration, and the resistance of fibroid mass against surrounding tissue produces a deep aching or pressure that is distinct from the sharp nerve-like pain of posterior endometriosis but functionally similar in its impact. Learn more about uterine fibroids →
Ovarian Cysts
Ovarian cysts — particularly endometriomas — produce deep pelvic pain during intercourse when the affected ovary is moved or compressed during penetration. The pain is typically lateralized to the side of the affected ovary and may be accompanied by a sense of adnexal fullness or pressure. Endometriomas are among the ovarian cysts most consistently associated with deep dyspareunia because they are embedded in the ovarian tissue and tethered to surrounding structures by endometriosis-related adhesions that limit ovarian mobility.
Pelvic Adhesions
Adhesions binding pelvic organs together restrict their normal mobility during intercourse, producing a pulling, tearing, or deep aching pain when those organs are moved against their adhesive tethering. Women with significant pelvic adhesion disease from prior surgery, prior infection, or endometriosis frequently describe deep dyspareunia with a positional quality — certain positions that move the affected structures more dramatically produce more pain than others.
Vaginal Atrophy and Hormone-Related Dryness
Declining estrogen levels during perimenopause and after menopause produce thinning and drying of the vaginal tissues — a condition called genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) or vulvovaginal atrophy. This produces superficial dyspareunia characterized by burning, stinging, and pain with penetration from inadequate lubrication and reduced tissue elasticity. It is among the most effectively treated causes of dyspareunia, with both local hormonal treatment and non-hormonal options available. Vaginal dryness producing superficial pain can also occur in women of reproductive age on certain hormonal medications that reduce estrogen levels.
Pelvic Floor Dysfunction — Vaginismus and Hypertonic Pelvic Floor
Hypertonic pelvic floor dysfunction — chronic excessive tension in the pelvic floor musculature — produces superficial to mid-vaginal pain with penetration from the resistance and spasm of tight pelvic floor muscles. In its most pronounced form, known as vaginismus, involuntary muscular contraction prevents penetration entirely. Pelvic floor dysfunction frequently develops as a protective response to a painful gynecologic condition and can perpetuate pain independently even after the underlying cause has been treated. It is identified on focused pelvic examination and addressed through pelvic floor physical therapy as a central component of a comprehensive dyspareunia treatment plan.
Vulvodynia and Vestibulodynia
Vulvodynia is chronic vulvar pain without an identifiable structural cause — a nerve-mediated pain condition that produces burning, stinging, or rawness at the vulva and vaginal opening. Vestibulodynia specifically refers to pain localized to the vestibule — the tissue just inside the vaginal opening — and is characterized by exquisite tenderness to light touch or pressure at the introitus. These conditions produce superficial dyspareunia and require specific evaluation and management distinct from structural gynecologic causes.
Because superficial and deep dyspareunia arise from different mechanisms and frequently coexist, a thorough evaluation that assesses both components — including a focused pelvic examination, assessment of pelvic floor tone, and targeted imaging — is the basis of effective treatment.
Your evaluation is led by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG — with a clinical approach that treats dyspareunia as a legitimate symptom with a specific cause, not as a psychological complaint or a normal variation to be accommodated.
Step 1 — Detailed Symptom History
Dr. Andrei reviews the full history of your dyspareunia — its location, character, timing, what makes it better or worse, how long it has been present, how it has changed over time, and what other gynecologic symptoms are present. The distinction between superficial and deep pain, and the relationship to the menstrual cycle, are the most diagnostically important pieces of history.
Step 2 — Focused Pelvic Examination and Imaging
A careful pelvic examination assesses vulvar and vaginal tissue quality, pelvic floor tone, uterosacral ligament tenderness, uterine mobility, and adnexal findings. This examination is performed with attention to the specific components most relevant to your symptom pattern. Transvaginal ultrasound evaluates for structural causes. MRI is recommended when deep infiltrating endometriosis is suspected.
Step 3 — A Treatment Plan That Addresses the Cause
Treatment recommendations address the specific mechanism or mechanisms identified. A woman with deep dyspareunia from endometriosis requires a different treatment plan than one with superficial pain from vaginal atrophy or pelvic floor dysfunction. The plan is matched to the diagnosis — and when multiple causes contribute, each is addressed.
Treatment for dyspareunia is entirely dependent on its cause. The following represents the range of approaches available at Lapeer Women’s Health for the most common causes of painful intercourse.
Vaginal atrophy and hormone-related dryness respond well to topical estrogen, vaginal moisturizers, and lubricants — treatments that restore tissue quality and eliminate the friction-related pain of inadequate lubrication. Local vaginal estrogen is highly effective and delivers minimal systemic absorption. For pelvic floor dysfunction, pelvic floor physical therapy is the primary treatment and is often combined with other approaches for the best outcomes.
Deep dyspareunia from endometriosis, adenomyosis, or hormonal causes responds to hormonal suppression that reduces the cyclical inflammatory activity driving posterior pelvic pain. For women whose deep pain is driven by endometriosis, hormonal management provides symptom control for those who are not yet ready for surgical treatment. For vaginal atrophy producing deep pain from reduced tissue quality, systemic or local hormonal therapy restores vaginal health.
For women with deep dyspareunia from endometriosis, adhesions, or structural causes that require surgical treatment, laparoscopic and robotic-assisted excision surgery addresses the structural source of pain directly. Posterior endometriosis excision — removal of uterosacral ligament, cul-de-sac, and rectovaginal septum disease — specifically targets the endometriosis most responsible for deep dyspareunia and typically produces meaningful improvement in intercourse-related pain following thorough excision.
Dyspareunia is among the most consistently underreported gynecologic symptoms because women have been told it is normal, that nothing can be done, that it is psychological, or that they should simply accommodate it. That message has no clinical basis. Painful intercourse has identifiable causes, and those causes have effective treatments.
Raising this symptom in a clinical encounter can feel difficult — but it is one of the most important things you can do for your gynecologic health. An evaluation that takes dyspareunia seriously, identifies its specific mechanism, and offers targeted treatment is available at Lapeer Women’s Health at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices.
Dr. Ramona D. Andrei and the team at Lapeer Women’s Health are here to provide that evaluation — without a referral required.
Pain During Intercourse
Our team at Lapeer Women’s Health evaluates dyspareunia with the clinical thoroughness it deserves — at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices, without a referral required.
Schedule a Gynecologic VisitThe information on this page is intended for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Individual symptoms, diagnoses, and treatment options vary significantly. Reading this content does not establish a physician-patient relationship with Dr. Ramona D. Andrei or Lapeer Women’s Health. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room immediately. Please consult a qualified healthcare provider for advice specific to your situation. Content reviewed by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD PhD FACOG.
Gynecologic care for women of every age
Lapeer Women’s Health — Rochester Hills
2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2
Rochester Hills, MI 48307
Serving patients in Lapeer, Rochester Hills, and surrounding communities throughout Southeast Michigan.
