Lapeer · Rochester Hills · Telehealth

Adenomyosis
vs. Fibroids
Two Different Conditions, Overlapping Symptoms — and Why the Distinction Matters

Adenomyosis and fibroids share many symptoms — heavy periods, pelvic pain, bloating, and an enlarged uterus among them. They can coexist in the same patient. And they are frequently confused with each other, or missed entirely, because their presentations overlap so significantly. Understanding the difference between them is not a technicality. It directly determines which treatments will work and which will not.

Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG provides expert evaluation and treatment for both conditions at our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices, with a focus on accurate diagnosis as the foundation of effective care.

Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Most major insurances accepted
Serving Lapeer County & Oakland County

Two Conditions That Are Easily Confused — And Why Getting Them Right Matters

Adenomyosis and uterine fibroids are distinct conditions with different underlying biology, different structural characteristics, and different treatment implications. They are also conditions whose symptoms overlap so significantly that they are frequently mistaken for each other — and sometimes both are present simultaneously, each contributing to a symptom picture that is more complex than either condition would produce alone.

Getting the distinction right matters because the treatment approaches are not interchangeable. Surgical removal of fibroids does not treat adenomyosis. Hormonal management that controls adenomyosis symptoms may have limited effect on fibroids producing mechanical pressure or bleeding from a different mechanism. A hysteroscopic procedure that addresses a submucosal fibroid may leave adenomyosis entirely untreated. When both conditions are present, a treatment plan that accounts for only one of them will produce incomplete results.

This page explains what each condition is, how they differ biologically and structurally, how their symptoms compare and where they overlap, how each is diagnosed, and what the treatment implications are when one or both are present. If you have been diagnosed with fibroids but your symptoms have not improved as expected with treatment, or if you have symptoms that fit both conditions, this page provides the clinical context that may have been missing from prior conversations.

What Each Condition Is — The Biological Distinction

Understanding the fundamental difference between adenomyosis and fibroids starts with understanding where each condition originates and what it does to uterine structure.

Uterine Fibroids — Discrete Growths Within or Around the Uterus

Uterine fibroids are discrete, well-defined, noncancerous growths that develop from the smooth muscle cells of the uterine wall. They are structurally separate from the normal uterine tissue surrounding them — they have defined borders, they can be identified individually on imaging, and they can in most cases be removed surgically as distinct structures. Fibroids can grow within the uterine wall (intramural), project into the uterine cavity (submucosal), grow outward from the uterine surface (subserosal), or develop on a stalk (pedunculated). Their clinical impact depends primarily on their location relative to the uterine lining and surrounding structures.

Adenomyosis — Uterine Lining Tissue Embedded in the Uterine Wall

Adenomyosis occurs when the glands and supporting tissue of the endometrium — the uterine lining that sheds during menstruation — grow into and become embedded within the muscular wall of the uterus (the myometrium). Unlike fibroids, adenomyosis does not form discrete, removable growths. It is a diffuse process in which endometrial tissue infiltrates the uterine muscle throughout the wall, causing the muscle to thicken, bleed with each menstrual cycle, and become progressively more reactive and painful over time. Adenomyosis cannot be surgically excised the way fibroids can — the affected tissue is distributed throughout the muscle wall rather than forming a structure that can be removed.

Adenomyoma — When Adenomyosis Forms a Focal Mass

In some cases, adenomyosis forms a localized, focal collection within the uterine wall called an adenomyoma. An adenomyoma can appear on ultrasound as a poorly defined thickening or mass within the uterine muscle — and it is precisely this appearance that creates diagnostic confusion with intramural fibroids. Fibroids typically appear as well-defined structures with clear borders on ultrasound, while adenomyomas tend to have less distinct margins and a more heterogeneous texture. The distinction is clinically important because an adenomyoma does not respond to surgical removal the same way a fibroid does — and its treatment requires different surgical planning.

Symptom Comparison — Where They Overlap and Where They Differ

The symptom profiles of adenomyosis and fibroids overlap substantially, which is the primary reason they are so often confused. The following comparisons highlight both the shared features and the distinguishing characteristics that help point toward one diagnosis versus the other — or both simultaneously.

Heavy Menstrual Bleeding — Both Conditions, Different Mechanisms

Both adenomyosis and fibroids cause heavy menstrual bleeding, but through different mechanisms. Submucosal and intramural fibroids increase the surface area and distortion of the uterine cavity, impairing the uterus’s ability to contract and control blood loss. Adenomyosis causes the uterine muscle to become engorged with blood and inflammatory mediators each cycle, producing a heavy, prolonged bleed that is driven by the widespread infiltration of the muscle rather than by a discrete structural growth. Distinguishing between fibroid-related and adenomyosis-related heavy bleeding is relevant to treatment planning because each responds to different interventions.

Pelvic Pain — Similar Symptoms, Different Character

Both conditions cause pelvic pain, but the character of adenomyosis pain is typically more diffuse, more deeply aching, and more consistently linked to the menstrual cycle than fibroid-related pain. Adenomyosis frequently produces severe dysmenorrhea — menstrual cramping that is significantly worse than typical period pain, often beginning before the period starts and persisting throughout. Fibroid-related pain tends to be more associated with the mechanical effects of fibroid mass — pressure, heaviness, and localized discomfort — rather than the diffuse, cyclical, cramping quality of adenomyosis pain. When both conditions are present, severe cramping alongside pelvic pressure and heavy bleeding often indicates concurrent adenomyosis and fibroids.

Uterine Enlargement — Common to Both, Different in Character

Both adenomyosis and multiple or large fibroids can produce a significantly enlarged uterus. The difference is in the texture and distribution of that enlargement. A fibroid uterus typically has an irregular, lumpy contour produced by discrete fibroid growths of varying sizes. An adenomyotic uterus tends to be more uniformly enlarged and softer in texture, with a globular, symmetric appearance on ultrasound rather than the asymmetric, nodular contour of a heavily fibroid-laden uterus. An experienced examiner can often distinguish between the two on pelvic examination, but ultrasound and sometimes MRI are required for a definitive assessment.

Symptoms More Characteristic of Adenomyosis

Severe dysmenorrhea that begins before the onset of flow and persists throughout the cycle. Pain during intercourse with a deep, aching quality. Progressively worsening menstrual pain over years. A soft, uniformly enlarged, tender uterus on examination. Heavy bleeding accompanied by significant cramping that is poorly responsive to NSAIDs. These features, particularly in combination, are more suggestive of adenomyosis than fibroids — though the overlap is significant and imaging is required to clarify the diagnosis.

Symptoms More Characteristic of Fibroids

Pelvic pressure, fullness, or heaviness in the lower abdomen. Bladder urgency or urinary frequency. Lower back pain radiating into the thighs. Visible or palpable abdominal enlargement with an irregular or asymmetric contour. Heavy bleeding without severe cramping. These features are more characteristic of fibroids than adenomyosis — particularly when pressure and bulk symptoms predominate over pain. Again, the overlap is real, and both conditions can produce a similar overall symptom burden in any given patient.

When Both Are Present — A More Complex Clinical Picture

Adenomyosis and fibroids coexist in a significant proportion of women who have one or the other diagnosis. When both are present, the symptom burden is typically greater than either condition would produce alone. Heavy bleeding, severe pain, significant uterine enlargement, and multiple pressure symptoms occurring together in a woman in her late 30s or 40s should prompt evaluation for both conditions simultaneously. A treatment plan that addresses only the fibroids while leaving adenomyosis untreated will produce incomplete results — and an explanation for why symptom improvement after fibroid surgery was less than expected.

How Each Condition Is Diagnosed

Accurate diagnosis of adenomyosis versus fibroids — or both — requires imaging and a thorough clinical evaluation. The diagnostic workup at Lapeer Women’s Health is led by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG, with an emphasis on getting the diagnosis right before building any treatment plan.

Pelvic Ultrasound — First-Line Imaging for Both

Pelvic ultrasound is the primary imaging tool for evaluating both conditions. Fibroids appear as well-defined masses with discrete borders. Adenomyosis produces characteristic changes in the uterine wall — asymmetric thickening, heterogeneous texture, cystic spaces within the muscle, and a poorly defined endometrial-myometrial junction — that an experienced sonographer can identify with reasonable accuracy. Transvaginal ultrasound provides higher resolution imaging of the uterine wall and is an important part of the evaluation when adenomyosis is suspected.

MRI — When Greater Diagnostic Precision Is Needed

MRI provides superior soft tissue contrast compared to ultrasound and is the most accurate noninvasive imaging tool for distinguishing adenomyosis from intramural fibroids, characterizing the extent of adenomyosis within the uterine wall, and identifying concurrent conditions. It is particularly valuable when ultrasound findings are ambiguous, when surgical planning requires precise anatomical characterization, or when prior treatment has not produced expected results and a more detailed evaluation is warranted.

Clinical History — An Essential Diagnostic Tool

The character, pattern, and progression of symptoms over time remain among the most valuable diagnostic inputs. A carefully taken clinical history — including the specific quality of pain, its relationship to the menstrual cycle, how symptoms have evolved over years, and what treatments have and have not helped — adds essential context to imaging findings and often resolves diagnostic ambiguity that imaging alone cannot definitively clarify.

Treatment Implications — Why the Diagnosis Changes the Plan

The treatment approaches for adenomyosis and fibroids overlap in some areas but diverge in others. Understanding those divergences is essential to building a plan that actually addresses what is driving your symptoms.

Medical Management
Hormonal Therapy — Effective for Both, Different Targets

Hormonal medications that suppress estrogen — including GnRH agonists, GnRH antagonists, and progestin-dominant therapies — are effective for managing symptoms of both adenomyosis and fibroids because both conditions are estrogen-responsive. A hormonal IUD can significantly reduce bleeding and pain from adenomyosis and is one of the most consistently effective medical options for adenomyosis specifically. Combined oral contraceptives and progestin therapy are also used for both conditions. When both conditions coexist, medical management may address symptoms from both simultaneously, making it a particularly valuable approach for women who are not yet ready for surgical intervention.

Hormonal IUD (Mirena / Liletta) GnRH agonists (Lupron) GnRH antagonists (Oriahnn / Myfembree) Combined oral contraceptives Progestin therapy Tranexamic acid for bleeding
Surgical Treatment — Fibroids
Myomectomy — Addresses Fibroids, Not Adenomyosis

Myomectomy removes discrete fibroids while leaving the uterus intact. It is highly effective for the symptoms produced by fibroids — particularly heavy bleeding from submucosal fibroids and pressure symptoms from subserosal or large intramural fibroids. However, myomectomy does not treat adenomyosis. If adenomyosis is present alongside fibroids and is not addressed in the treatment plan, symptom improvement after myomectomy may be incomplete. This is one of the most important reasons that an accurate preoperative diagnosis of both conditions is essential before proceeding with surgery.

Hysteroscopic myomectomy Laparoscopic myomectomy Robotic-assisted myomectomy
Definitive Surgical Treatment
Hysterectomy — The Only Definitive Treatment for Both

Hysterectomy is the only surgical treatment that definitively resolves both fibroids and adenomyosis simultaneously — because both conditions exist within the uterine tissue that is removed. For women with both conditions who have completed childbearing and whose symptoms have not been adequately controlled by medical management or uterus-preserving surgery, minimally invasive hysterectomy addresses both conditions in a single procedure. Dr. Andrei performs laparoscopic and robotic-assisted hysterectomy with a consistent emphasis on minimally invasive approaches and reduced recovery time.

Laparoscopic hysterectomy Robotic-assisted hysterectomy
If Your Symptoms Have Not Improved as Expected, the Diagnosis May Not Be Complete

One of the most common clinical scenarios that leads women to seek a second gynecologic opinion is the experience of undergoing treatment for fibroids — whether medical or surgical — and finding that their symptoms have improved less than expected or have not improved at all. In many of these cases, the missing piece is adenomyosis that was not identified or not adequately factored into the treatment plan.

If your treatment history includes fibroid management that has not resolved your symptoms, or if your symptom picture includes both the pressure and bulk symptoms typical of fibroids and the severe cyclical pain and cramping more characteristic of adenomyosis, a careful re-evaluation that specifically looks for both conditions is worth pursuing.

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

Frequently Asked Questions About
Adenomyosis vs. Fibroids
Yes — and this coexistence is common. Both conditions are estrogen-sensitive and share several risk factors, including age in the reproductive years and a history of prior uterine procedures. Women with one condition have a meaningfully elevated likelihood of having the other. When both are present, symptoms are typically more severe than either condition would produce alone — heavy bleeding combined with severe cramping, significant pelvic pressure alongside intense dysmenorrhea, and a uterus that is both irregularly enlarged from fibroids and diffusely thickened from adenomyosis. Identifying both conditions is essential to building a treatment plan that addresses the complete picture.
Adenomyosis can be challenging to diagnose definitively on standard pelvic ultrasound, particularly when it is diffuse rather than focal. Transvaginal ultrasound performed by an experienced sonographer who specifically evaluates the myometrium for adenomyosis features improves diagnostic accuracy. When ultrasound findings are ambiguous or when precise characterization is needed for surgical planning, MRI provides superior soft tissue detail and is the most accurate noninvasive tool for confirming adenomyosis and assessing its extent. Historically, adenomyosis could only be definitively diagnosed by examining the uterine tissue after hysterectomy — which is one reason it was so frequently missed in women who were managed without surgery.
This is one of the most important questions to ask when fibroid treatment has produced less improvement than expected. Adenomyosis is frequently present alongside fibroids and is not always identified or specifically evaluated before fibroid-directed treatment is initiated. When myomectomy removes fibroids but adenomyosis remains untreated, bleeding and pain symptoms from the adenomyosis continue unchanged. If your fibroid surgery relieved pressure symptoms and abdominal distension but heavy bleeding and severe cramping persisted, adenomyosis as a concurrent contributor is a strong clinical possibility worth evaluating. A re-evaluation including transvaginal ultrasound and possibly MRI is the appropriate next step.
Partly. Hormonal management — including GnRH agonists, hormonal IUDs, and progestin therapy — is effective for both conditions and can be used to manage symptoms from either or both simultaneously. The key surgical difference is that fibroids can be specifically removed by myomectomy while adenomyosis cannot — because adenomyosis is a diffuse infiltration of the uterine muscle rather than a discrete removable structure. This means that for women with both conditions who require surgical treatment, myomectomy addresses the fibroids but not the adenomyosis, while hysterectomy addresses both definitively. The treatment plan for a patient with both conditions requires explicit consideration of how each component will be addressed.
Yes. Adenomyosis is one of the most significant causes of heavy menstrual bleeding in women in their 30s and 40s, and the bleeding it produces can be as severe as that from submucosal fibroids. The mechanism is different — adenomyosis causes the uterine muscle to become infiltrated with endometrial glands that bleed each cycle, disrupting normal contractile function and producing heavy, prolonged flow — but the clinical result can be indistinguishable from fibroid-related bleeding without imaging to clarify the cause. Women who have heavy bleeding without identifiable fibroids on ultrasound should have adenomyosis considered as a likely alternative or concurrent diagnosis.
Yes. Evaluations for adenomyosis, fibroids, and concurrent conditions 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). 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  ·  Most major insurances accepted  ·  Convenient locations in Lapeer & Rochester Hills
If Your Symptoms Have Not Added Up, the Diagnosis May Not Be Complete.

An evaluation that specifically considers both adenomyosis and fibroids — and their interaction — is the starting point for a treatment plan that actually works. Our team at Lapeer Women’s Health is here to provide that evaluation at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices. 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.