Lapeer · Rochester Hills · Telehealth

Endometriosis
Expert Diagnosis, Excision Surgery & Comprehensive Care

Endometriosis affects an estimated one in ten women of reproductive age — yet the average time from first symptom to accurate diagnosis is still measured in years, not months. If you have been told your pain is normal, that nothing is wrong, or that there is nothing more that can be done, that is not the end of the conversation.

Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG provides comprehensive endometriosis evaluation and surgical treatment — including excision surgery and robotic-assisted approaches — at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices. No referral required.

Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Excision & robotic-assisted endometriosis surgery
Serving Lapeer County & Oakland County

Endometriosis in Lapeer and Rochester Hills — What You Need to Know

Endometriosis is a chronic gynecologic condition in which tissue similar to the uterine lining grows outside the uterus — on the ovaries, fallopian tubes, pelvic peritoneum, bowel, bladder, and in some cases beyond the pelvis entirely. Each menstrual cycle, this tissue responds to hormonal changes the way the uterine lining does — it thickens, breaks down, and bleeds — but with nowhere to go, producing inflammation, scarring, adhesions, and pain that can become severely disabling over time.

Despite affecting a significant proportion of women of reproductive age, endometriosis remains one of the most underdiagnosed conditions in gynecology. The average delay between a woman’s first symptoms and an accurate diagnosis exceeds seven years. That delay is not inevitable — it is a product of pain being normalized, symptoms being attributed to other causes, and endometriosis not being considered early enough in the diagnostic process. Early evaluation and accurate diagnosis make a meaningful difference in outcomes.

At Lapeer Women’s Health, Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG approaches endometriosis with both the clinical depth it requires and the surgical expertise it often demands. Evaluation, medical management, excision surgery, and robotic-assisted surgical treatment are all available — with a consistent emphasis on accurate diagnosis as the foundation of every treatment plan.

Common Symptoms of Endometriosis

Endometriosis produces a wide range of symptoms that vary significantly from woman to woman. Some women have severe pain with relatively limited disease on imaging. Others have extensive endometriosis with surprisingly manageable symptoms. The absence of a dramatic presentation does not mean endometriosis is absent — and the presence of the following symptoms warrants evaluation.

  • Severe menstrual cramping that is significantly worse than typical period pain and may begin before the period starts
  • Pelvic pain that persists beyond the menstrual period — chronic, cyclical, or constant
  • Pain during or after sexual intercourse, particularly with deep penetration
  • Painful bowel movements or rectal pain, especially during menstruation
  • Urinary urgency, frequency, or pain during urination that worsens around the menstrual period
  • Heavy menstrual bleeding or irregular periods
  • Spotting or bleeding between periods
  • Lower back pain with a cyclical pattern linked to menstruation
  • Bloating, nausea, or gastrointestinal symptoms that worsen with the menstrual cycle
  • Fatigue — often severe — particularly during menstruation
  • Difficulty conceiving or a history of infertility without a clear explanation
  • Symptoms that have progressively worsened over months or years

Endometriosis symptoms are frequently normalized or attributed to other conditions — irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, or simply “bad periods.” If you recognize these patterns, particularly if they have been present for more than one or two cycles and are affecting your quality of life, an evaluation with Dr. Andrei is an appropriate and important next step.

When to Contact Our Office Promptly

Most endometriosis symptoms develop gradually and are appropriately addressed through a scheduled appointment. Contact our office the same day if you experience:

  • Sudden, severe pelvic pain unlike your usual endometriosis pain — particularly if accompanied by fever or signs of infection
  • Acute pelvic pain with nausea or vomiting that may indicate a ruptured ovarian cyst
  • Heavy vaginal bleeding alongside acute pelvic pain
  • Pelvic pain severe enough to prevent normal function that is not responding to your usual management
These symptoms warrant prompt evaluation rather than a routine scheduled visit.
Lapeer: (810) 969-4670  ·  Rochester Hills: (248) 923-3522
Understanding Endometriosis — What It Is and How It Affects the Body

Endometriosis is not simply painful periods. It is a systemic inflammatory condition with structural consequences that extend well beyond the menstrual cycle. Understanding what it is and how it behaves is essential context for understanding why accurate diagnosis and appropriate treatment matter so significantly.

Where Endometriosis Grows

Endometriosis most commonly involves the ovaries, fallopian tubes, the lining of the pelvic cavity (peritoneum), the uterosacral ligaments, and the space between the uterus and rectum known as the cul-de-sac or pouch of Douglas. It can also involve the bladder, ureter, bowel, appendix, and in rare cases structures outside the pelvis entirely including the diaphragm. The location of endometriosis implants determines much of the symptom pattern — ovarian endometriosis produces different symptoms than deep infiltrating endometriosis of the uterosacral ligaments or bowel.

Endometriomas — Ovarian Cysts From Endometriosis

When endometriosis involves the ovaries, it can form cysts filled with old blood — called endometriomas or “chocolate cysts” because of their characteristic dark brown contents. Endometriomas are identifiable on pelvic ultrasound and are one of the most reliably detected forms of endometriosis on imaging. They can grow to significant size, cause pelvic pain and pressure, and affect ovarian function and fertility. Their presence on ultrasound is often the finding that leads to a first formal endometriosis diagnosis.

Deep Infiltrating Endometriosis

Deep infiltrating endometriosis (DIE) refers to endometriosis implants that penetrate more than five millimeters below the peritoneal surface, involving the uterosacral ligaments, rectovaginal septum, bladder wall, or bowel wall. This form of endometriosis produces some of the most severe pain symptoms — particularly deep dyspareunia, cyclical rectal pain, and painful urination — and is among the most surgically complex to treat. It is also among the most commonly missed on standard imaging because superficial ultrasound does not reliably identify deep infiltrating lesions without specific bowel preparation and technique.

Why Endometriosis Causes Pain

The pain of endometriosis is produced through several overlapping mechanisms. Endometriosis implants bleed cyclically with each menstrual period, creating local inflammation that stimulates pain-sensitive nerve fibers. Over time, repeated cycles of bleeding and inflammation produce fibrous scar tissue (adhesions) that can tether pelvic organs together, restricting their normal movement and producing chronic pain that is no longer purely cycle-dependent. Deep infiltrating endometriosis directly involves nerve-rich structures including the uterosacral ligaments, producing pain that is often severe and constant. Central sensitization — a process in which the nervous system becomes increasingly reactive to pain signals over time — further amplifies symptoms in women with long-standing disease.

Endometriosis and Fertility

Endometriosis is identified in a significant proportion of women who are evaluated for infertility. The mechanisms through which endometriosis affects fertility are multiple — including anatomical distortion from adhesions, impaired ovarian reserve from endometriomas, altered tubal function, and an inflammatory pelvic environment that may affect implantation. The relationship between endometriosis and fertility is complex and highly individual — some women with severe endometriosis conceive without difficulty, while others with minimal visible disease have significant fertility challenges. Surgical treatment of endometriosis, particularly excision, has documented benefit for fertility outcomes in appropriately selected patients.

Why Diagnosis Is So Often Delayed

The average diagnostic delay for endometriosis is among the longest of any chronic condition in medicine. Several factors contribute. Menstrual pain is normalized in many cultural and clinical contexts, delaying the recognition that pain at a particular level is not typical. Endometriosis does not reliably appear on standard pelvic ultrasound unless ovarian endometriomas are present, which means a normal ultrasound does not rule out the condition. The definitive historical diagnostic standard has been laparoscopic surgery with tissue biopsy — an invasive step that historically required sufficient clinical suspicion before it was offered. And because endometriosis symptoms overlap with those of other conditions including IBS, IC, and pelvic floor dysfunction, it is frequently attributed to those conditions first.

Understanding that a normal ultrasound does not exclude endometriosis is one of the most important things a woman can know when seeking evaluation for symptoms that fit this condition. Clinical history, symptom pattern, and a high index of suspicion are essential components of an accurate endometriosis evaluation.

What an Endometriosis Evaluation Looks Like at Lapeer Women’s Health

Your evaluation is led by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG — with a focus on taking your symptoms seriously, building a complete clinical picture, and developing a management plan that reflects the full range of available options.

Step 1 — A Thorough Symptom History

Dr. Andrei reviews your complete symptom history — the character and location of your pain, its relationship to your menstrual cycle, how it has changed over time, what has been tried previously, and how it is affecting your daily life. This history is not a formality. In endometriosis, the clinical story is often the most diagnostically meaningful information available.

Step 2 — Targeted Imaging and Examination

A pelvic exam and transvaginal ultrasound are performed with specific attention to signs of endometriosis — including ovarian endometriomas, restricted ovarian mobility, and uterosacral tenderness. When imaging findings are ambiguous or when deep infiltrating endometriosis is suspected, MRI may be recommended for more precise anatomical characterization.

Step 3 — A Management Plan That Fits Your Goals

Treatment recommendations are built around your specific presentation, your reproductive goals, the severity of your symptoms, and your preferences. The full range of options — from medical management through excision surgery — is discussed before any recommendation is finalized. No decision is made without your full understanding of what is being proposed and why.

Endometriosis Treatment Options at Lapeer Women’s Health

Endometriosis treatment is individualized based on symptom severity, disease extent, reproductive goals, and the patient’s own priorities. There is no single correct approach — and the right plan evolves as circumstances change over time.

Medical Management
Hormonal Therapy & Symptom Control

Hormonal treatments suppress estrogen-driven endometriosis activity, reducing inflammation, pain, and bleeding. They do not eliminate endometriosis lesions but can provide meaningful symptom control, particularly for women who are not yet ready for surgery, who wish to defer surgical treatment, or who need management between surgical procedures. The right hormonal approach depends on symptom severity, reproductive goals, and tolerability.

Combined oral contraceptives Progestin therapy GnRH agonists (Lupron) GnRH antagonists (Oriahnn / Myfembree) Hormonal IUD (Mirena / Liletta) NSAIDs for pain management
Surgical Treatment
Excision Surgery & Minimally Invasive Approaches

Surgical treatment of endometriosis removes or destroys endometriosis implants directly. Excision — the complete surgical removal of endometriosis lesions — is associated with more durable symptom relief and lower recurrence rates than ablation (surface destruction) alone, and is the preferred surgical approach for most patients. Dr. Andrei performs laparoscopic and robotic-assisted excision surgery, with a strong emphasis on minimally invasive techniques that reduce recovery time and surgical impact. Ovarian endometriomas are treated by cystectomy — removal of the cyst wall — rather than simple drainage, which has a higher recurrence rate.

Laparoscopic endometriosis excision Robotic-assisted excision surgery Ovarian cystectomy for endometriomas Adhesion lysis Laparoscopic ablation (select cases)
Definitive Surgical Treatment
Hysterectomy — For Select Patients With Severe Disease

For women with severe endometriosis who have completed childbearing and for whom other treatments have not provided adequate relief, hysterectomy with removal of the ovaries eliminates the hormonal drive for endometriosis activity. It is not a universal solution — endometriosis implants outside the uterus must be addressed at the time of surgery, and residual disease can occasionally persist or recur even after hysterectomy. It is, however, the most definitive treatment available for women whose disease burden and symptom severity make it the appropriate choice. Dr. Andrei performs minimally invasive and robotic-assisted hysterectomy.

Laparoscopic hysterectomy Robotic-assisted hysterectomy Concurrent endometriosis excision at time of hysterectomy
Endometriosis Surgery at Lapeer Women’s Health

For patients whose endometriosis requires surgical treatment, Dr. Andrei’s training in minimally invasive and robotic-assisted gynecologic surgery provides access to the full range of surgical approaches — with a strong emphasis on excision over ablation and minimally invasive techniques over open surgery.

Excision & Robotic-Assisted Surgery

Dr. Andrei performs laparoscopic and robotic-assisted endometriosis excision surgery — the approach associated with the most durable symptom relief and the lowest recurrence rates. Robotic assistance provides enhanced visualization and precision that is particularly valuable for excising deep infiltrating endometriosis and for managing disease in anatomically complex locations.

Hospital Affiliations

Surgical procedures are performed at McLaren Lapeer Region, Beaumont Hospital Royal Oak, and Crittenton Hospital — providing access to facilities equipped for advanced minimally invasive gynecologic surgery for patients from both the Lapeer and Rochester Hills service areas.

No Referral Required

You do not need a referral to schedule an endometriosis evaluation or surgical consultation with Dr. Andrei. Contact either our Lapeer or Rochester Hills office directly. If you have prior imaging, operative reports, or records from previous evaluations, bringing them to your appointment is helpful — but not required to get started.

Your Pain Is Real — And It Deserves a Real Evaluation

The most consistent theme in the experience of women with endometriosis is the length of time between first symptoms and first accurate diagnosis — and the number of times their pain was minimized, normalized, or attributed to something else in between. That experience is not inevitable, and it is not something you have to continue to accept.

Endometriosis is a real, identifiable, treatable condition. The evaluation that leads to an accurate diagnosis starts with a provider who takes the clinical history seriously, understands the limitations of standard imaging, and approaches pelvic pain with the thoroughness it deserves. That is what every appointment at Lapeer Women’s Health is designed to provide.

Dr. Ramona D. Andrei and the team at Lapeer Women’s Health are here for that evaluation — at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices, without a referral required.

Frequently Asked Questions About
Endometriosis
In many cases, yes — though the answer depends on the form of endometriosis involved. Ovarian endometriomas are reliably identified on transvaginal ultrasound. Deep infiltrating endometriosis can be identified on dedicated MRI with appropriate technique. Superficial peritoneal endometriosis — the most common form — does not reliably appear on any imaging modality, and historically required diagnostic laparoscopy with tissue biopsy for definitive confirmation. In current clinical practice, many providers make a clinical diagnosis of endometriosis based on history, physical examination findings, and imaging, and proceed with medical or surgical treatment without requiring laparoscopic confirmation first. Dr. Andrei discusses the appropriate diagnostic pathway for your specific presentation at your evaluation.
Excision removes endometriosis lesions completely by cutting them out of the surrounding tissue. Ablation destroys the surface of lesions using heat or laser energy without removing the underlying tissue. Excision is associated with more complete removal of disease, lower recurrence rates, and more durable symptom relief — and is the preferred approach for most patients at Lapeer Women’s Health. Ablation may be appropriate in select circumstances — particularly for superficial lesions in locations where excision carries higher risk. The distinction matters clinically: incomplete treatment of endometriosis is one of the most common reasons symptoms return after surgery, and excision offers the most thorough approach to removing disease at its source.
Endometriosis can recur after surgery — but recurrence rates following thorough excision are significantly lower than those following ablation or incomplete surgical treatment. The likelihood of recurrence depends on the completeness of surgical removal, the extent of disease at the time of surgery, whether hormonal suppression is used after surgery, and individual biological factors. Excision surgery performed by a surgeon with experience in endometriosis is associated with the lowest recurrence rates. Many women experience years of meaningful symptom relief following thorough excision, and for women who have completed childbearing, hysterectomy with removal of the ovaries provides the most definitive long-term resolution.
Endometriosis is associated with reduced fertility in some women, though the relationship is complex and highly individual. Mechanisms include anatomical distortion from adhesions, ovarian reserve reduction from endometriomas, and an inflammatory pelvic environment that may affect egg quality and implantation. Surgical treatment — particularly excision of endometriosis lesions and cystectomy for endometriomas — has documented benefit for fertility outcomes in appropriately selected patients. For women with endometriosis who are trying to conceive or planning future pregnancy, the evaluation and treatment conversation at Lapeer Women’s Health includes specific attention to preserving and optimizing reproductive potential.
Yes. A normal pelvic ultrasound does not rule out endometriosis. Standard ultrasound reliably identifies ovarian endometriomas when they are present, but superficial peritoneal endometriosis — the most common form — is invisible on ultrasound. Deep infiltrating endometriosis is also frequently missed on standard ultrasound without specific technique and bowel preparation. Many women with significant symptomatic endometriosis have entirely normal ultrasound findings. The diagnosis of endometriosis in women without visible ovarian cysts is based primarily on clinical history, physical examination findings, and in some cases MRI — not on the results of standard pelvic ultrasound alone.
Yes. Endometriosis evaluations and treatment consultations are available at both the Lapeer office (1245 N Main St, Lapeer, MI — (810) 969-4670) and the Rochester Hills office (2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2, Rochester Hills, MI — (248) 923-3522). Surgical procedures are performed at Dr. Andrei’s affiliated hospital facilities. No referral is required to schedule. Our team will help you choose the location and appointment time that works best for you.
Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Excision & robotic-assisted endometriosis surgery  ·  Lapeer & Rochester Hills
You Have Waited Long Enough for Answers.

If endometriosis has been part of your life — diagnosed or suspected — Dr. Andrei and the team at Lapeer Women’s Health are here to provide the thorough evaluation and expert surgical care you deserve. Both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices are available. No referral required.

Schedule a Gynecologic Visit

The 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.