Pelvic pressure is one of the most commonly underreported gynecologic symptoms — not because it is rare, but because it develops gradually, feels difficult to describe in clinical terms, and does not fit neatly into the categories of pain that most women feel comfortable bringing to a medical appointment. A persistent sense of heaviness in the lower pelvis, a feeling of something pressing downward, or a fullness that is always there regardless of how much you have eaten are real symptoms with real structural causes — and they deserve clinical evaluation.
Pelvic pressure in women most commonly reflects one of two broad categories of gynecologic condition: conditions that increase the bulk or weight of the uterus from above (fibroids, adenomyosis), or conditions that weaken the support structures of the pelvic floor from below (pelvic organ prolapse). Each produces a characteristic pressure pattern, each has its own diagnostic pathway, and each has effective treatments once the cause is identified.
This page explains the most common causes of pelvic pressure in women, how to recognize the patterns associated with each, and what evaluation and treatment look like at Lapeer Women’s Health. If you have been managing a persistent sense of pelvic fullness or heaviness without a clear explanation, this page is the starting point for understanding what may be responsible.
Pelvic pressure is described in many ways by women who experience it. The following descriptions reflect the most commonly reported sensations associated with gynecologic causes of pelvic pressure.
- A persistent sense of fullness, heaviness, or weight in the lower pelvis that is present most of the day
- A feeling of something pressing downward — a downward dragging or bearing-down sensation in the pelvis
- Pelvic heaviness that worsens throughout the day as you remain upright and improves when you lie down
- A sense of lower abdominal fullness that is present regardless of eating, bowel habits, or bladder filling
- Pelvic pressure accompanied by urinary urgency or the need to urinate more frequently than usual
- Pressure in the pelvis or lower abdomen during or after intercourse
- A sensation of rectal pressure or fullness that is not clearly related to the need for a bowel movement
- Pelvic heaviness alongside a visibly enlarged or rounded lower abdomen
- A feeling that something is falling out of or protruding from the vagina — suggesting pelvic organ prolapse
- Lower back aching that accompanies pelvic pressure and worsens with prolonged standing or activity
- Pressure symptoms that have developed gradually over months or years and have slowly worsened
Pelvic pressure that is affecting your daily comfort, your activity level, or your quality of life is worth evaluating — even if it does not feel like “pain.” Pressure symptoms have causes that are identifiable with a focused examination and pelvic ultrasound.
Most pelvic pressure is appropriately addressed through a scheduled appointment. Contact our office the same day if you experience:
- A sudden, significant increase in pelvic pressure or pain alongside acute symptoms
- Pelvic pressure with fever or signs of infection
- Complete inability to urinate alongside significant pelvic pressure
- Rapid or unexplained increase in abdominal size over a short period
Lapeer: (810) 969-4670 · Rochester Hills: (248) 923-3522
Pelvic pressure in women most commonly arises from two categories of conditions: those that increase the mechanical load on the pelvis from above (uterine and adnexal conditions), and those that reduce the support structures holding pelvic organs in their normal positions (pelvic floor conditions). Both categories are identifiable and treatable.
Uterine Fibroids — The Most Common Structural Cause of Pelvic Pressure
Uterine fibroids are among the most common structural causes of pelvic pressure in women of reproductive age. As fibroids grow, the uterus enlarges and occupies more space within the pelvic and abdominal cavity, displacing surrounding organs and producing the characteristic heaviness, fullness, and downward pressure that many women with significant fibroid burden describe. Subserosal fibroids pressing on adjacent structures and large intramural fibroids increasing overall uterine weight both contribute to pressure symptoms. Fibroids are reliably identified on pelvic ultrasound. Learn more about fibroids and pelvic pressure →
Pelvic Organ Prolapse — Pressure From Below
Pelvic organ prolapse occurs when the pelvic floor support structures weaken, allowing pelvic organs — the bladder, uterus, or rectum — to descend toward or beyond the vaginal opening. Prolapse produces a characteristic downward pressure, a bearing-down sensation, and in more significant cases a feeling that something is falling out or protruding. The pressure characteristically worsens throughout the day with gravity and with prolonged standing, and improves when lying down. Prolapse is identified on pelvic examination and is more common after childbirth, with age, and after prior pelvic surgery, though it can occur in any woman.
Adenomyosis
Adenomyosis causes the uterus to become diffusely enlarged and heavy as endometrial glands grow into the uterine muscle wall. The resulting uterine enlargement produces a characteristic pelvic heaviness and fullness that is most intense during menstruation but present to some degree throughout the cycle. Women with adenomyosis often describe their uterus as feeling heavy or full even between periods — a persistent baseline of pelvic pressure that worsens cyclically. Learn more about adenomyosis symptoms →
Ovarian Cysts
Large ovarian cysts produce pelvic pressure through their physical volume within the pelvic cavity. A significant endometrioma or other large ovarian cyst may produce a sense of lower abdominal fullness and pressure alongside adnexal tenderness. The pressure is typically lateralized to the side of the involved ovary but may be felt more diffusely when the cyst is large. Ovarian cysts are reliably identified on pelvic ultrasound.
Endometriosis
Deep infiltrating endometriosis involving the posterior pelvic structures, uterosacral ligaments, or rectovaginal septum produces a characteristic deep pelvic pressure alongside the more commonly recognized pain symptoms. The pressure quality of posterior endometriosis reflects the inflammation and structural involvement of the deep posterior pelvis and may be accompanied by rectal pressure or a sense of fullness in the posterior pelvis that worsens cyclically. Learn more about endometriosis →
Postmenopausal Pelvic Pressure — When Prolapse Is More Common
Pelvic pressure that develops or worsens in the postmenopausal years, particularly a sense of heaviness or bearing down that is worse with standing and improves with lying down, is a pattern highly consistent with pelvic organ prolapse. The decline in estrogen after menopause contributes to weakening of the pelvic support structures, and the cumulative effect of prior childbearing, gravity, and hormonal change produces prolapse in a significant proportion of postmenopausal women. Postmenopausal pelvic pressure should always be evaluated gynecologically — and if it is accompanied by any vaginal bleeding, that combination requires prompt evaluation.
Because pelvic pressure can arise from conditions affecting the uterus, ovaries, or pelvic floor, a thorough evaluation that assesses all three components — including pelvic examination and targeted ultrasound — is the basis of accurate diagnosis and effective treatment.
Your evaluation is led by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG — with a focus on identifying the structural source of your pressure symptoms through clinical examination and targeted imaging before any treatment recommendation is made.
Step 1 — Symptom History
Dr. Andrei reviews the character and pattern of your pelvic pressure — when it is worst, whether it improves with lying down, what other symptoms accompany it, and how long it has been present. The pattern of pressure symptoms — particularly whether they worsen with standing and improve with recumbency — is one of the most diagnostically useful clinical features for distinguishing prolapse from fibroids and other structural causes.
Step 2 — Pelvic Examination and Ultrasound
A pelvic examination assesses uterine size and contour, pelvic support, prolapse staging, adnexal findings, and other relevant structural features. Transvaginal ultrasound evaluates for fibroids, ovarian cysts, and adenomyosis. The combination of examination and imaging identifies the source of pressure symptoms efficiently and provides the information needed for treatment planning.
Step 3 — A Treatment Plan Matched to the Cause
Treatment for pelvic pressure is directed at the identified cause. The approach for fibroid-related pressure differs from that for prolapse-related pressure, and treatment options are presented specifically for what was found. The full range of appropriate options — from conservative management through minimally invasive surgery — is discussed before any recommendation is made.
Pelvic pressure is one of those symptoms that women have often been managing for so long, and adapting their lives around so thoroughly, that they no longer notice how significantly it has affected their daily functioning. The discomfort of prolonged standing, the need to sit down earlier than expected, the avoidance of activities that make the pressure worse — these adaptations happen gradually, and by the time they are established, the symptom that prompted them has become background noise.
It does not have to remain background noise. Pelvic pressure has causes that are identifiable with a focused examination and pelvic imaging — and those causes have effective treatments that can meaningfully change the daily experience you have been accepting as unavoidable.
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.
Pelvic Pressure Symptoms
Our team at Lapeer Women’s Health can identify it — with a focused evaluation at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices. No 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.
