
Endometriosis is one of the conditions I hear the most frustration about — not because the pain isn't taken seriously, but because of how long it usually takes to get there. On average, women wait years for a diagnosis, often after being told the pain is "just bad periods" more times than they can count.
What I focus on in clinic isn't replacing that diagnostic process — it's what happens around it. Endometriosis doesn't exist in isolation from the rest of your hormonal system; inflammation, oestrogen metabolism, and stress all interact with it in ways that are rarely explained clearly. Understanding your own pattern — not just the diagnosis itself — is often what makes the biggest difference to how you actually feel day to day.
If you live with endometriosis, you'll know that the bloating can be just as distressing as the pain. The kind that appears suddenly, that makes your clothes feel unbearable, that leaves you looking visibly pregnant by the end of the day even when you haven't eaten anything unusual.
It has a name in the endometriosis community: endo belly.
And if you've ever been told it's "just bloating" or dismissed as something you need to manage with diet alone, I want to start by saying — what you're experiencing is real, it's recognised, and there are good reasons it keeps happening.
This post is for you whether you've just been diagnosed and are trying to make sense of your symptoms, or you've been living with endometriosis for years and nobody has ever really explained why your gut behaves the way it does.
Let's get into it.
Endo belly refers to the severe abdominal distension — visible bloating — that many women with endometriosis experience. Unlike the mild bloating that most people associate with eating certain foods, endo belly can be dramatic, painful, and often appears with little warning.
For some women it's cyclical, worsening in the days around menstruation. For others it's present throughout the month with unpredictable flares. Many describe feeling fine in the morning and severely distended by the afternoon.
It's not imagined. It's not simply a food sensitivity. And it's rarely caused by just one thing.
This is where it gets interesting — and where mainstream medicine has often fallen short in offering a thorough explanation.
Research now points to several overlapping mechanisms, and understanding them matters because it changes how you approach support.
Endometriosis is fundamentally an inflammatory condition. Endometrial-like tissue growing outside the uterus triggers a chronic inflammatory response in the peritoneal cavity — the space that houses your digestive organs.
This local inflammation can affect the way your bowel functions, alter gut motility (the speed at which food moves through your digestive system), and contribute to fluid accumulation — all of which show up as bloating and abdominal distension.
Research published in Biology of Reproduction (2025) acknowledges that the mechanisms behind abdominal bloating in endometriosis appear linked to an interplay between hormonal changes and gut inflammation, though this area continues to develop. [1]
One of the most important and still-emerging areas of endometriosis research is the relationship between the condition and the gut microbiome.
A 2024 review published in Reproduction and Fertility by researchers at the University of Edinburgh explored how the microbiota-gut-brain axis plays a role in endometriosis-associated symptoms, explicitly naming bloating, dysbiosis, and IBS-type symptoms as key features. [2]
Women with endometriosis are often found to have altered gut microbiome composition — a state known as dysbiosis. This matters because a disrupted microbiome affects intestinal permeability, triggers inflammatory responses, and alters how oestrogen is processed and recirculated in the body. All of these have knock-on effects for both endometriosis progression and digestive symptoms including bloating.
A study published in PMC (2025) found significant dysbiosis in endometriosis patients, including an altered ratio of gut bacteria and elevated inflammatory markers, suggesting a meaningful link between gut microbiota and systemic inflammation in endometriosis. [3]
This one surprises many women. Research shows that women with endometriosis are twice as likely to also be diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) compared to the general population. [2]
This isn't coincidence. A review in PMC found that shared mechanisms — including gut dysbiosis, immune dysfunction, and visceral hypersensitivity — appear to underpin both conditions. [4] The overlap is so significant that endometriosis is frequently misdiagnosed as IBS, delaying diagnosis by an average of seven to ten years.
This also means that the bloating many women with endometriosis experience may be driven by IBS-type mechanisms even in the absence of bowel endometriosis specifically — because the inflammatory environment of endometriosis affects gut function even when lesions haven't directly invaded the bowel.
Even when endometriosis lesions are not located on or near the bowel, gut symptoms can still occur. Researchers have described a "cross-organ" effect, where changes to the central nervous system caused by nerve signalling from endometriotic tissue can impact gut function. [5]
This means endometriosis can disrupt digestive health through nervous system pathways, not just through direct physical involvement of the bowel — which explains why so many women experience significant gut symptoms even when scans don't show bowel involvement.
Oestrogen and progesterone both influence gut motility. In the luteal phase — the days before your period — progesterone slows gut transit, which can worsen bloating. At menstruation, prostaglandins released to trigger the uterine lining to shed can stimulate the bowel, causing cramping, diarrhoea, and bloating simultaneously.
In endometriosis, this hormonal signalling is already dysregulated. The result is a gut that is often more reactive, more sensitive, and less predictable throughout the entire cycle, not just around menstruation.
Several factors make bloating in endometriosis more severe and more distressing than typical functional bloating:
Visceral hypersensitivity — the nervous system becomes sensitised to gut sensations, meaning normal digestive processes feel disproportionately uncomfortable
Peritoneal inflammation — the inflammatory environment in the pelvis affects how the gut responds to food, stress, and hormonal changes
Impaired gut motility — slower or disrupted movement through the digestive tract allows gas to build up
Psychological impact — the visible distension affects body image, confidence, and daily functioning, which in turn influences the gut-brain axis and can worsen symptoms
I want to be clear: there is no single fix for endo belly, and anyone suggesting otherwise isn't giving you the full picture. But there are approaches that can make a meaningful difference when they're tailored to your specific presentation.
Dietary approaches — low FODMAP diets have shown benefit for IBS-type symptoms in endometriosis patients, particularly bloating, pain, and altered bowel patterns. However, the low FODMAP diet is a short-term elimination and reintroduction protocol, not a permanent way of eating, and it works best under proper guidance. Anti-inflammatory dietary approaches also have a role to play.
Gut microbiome support — emerging research into probiotics, prebiotics, and microbiome-targeted approaches is promising, though the evidence base is still developing. Supporting the gut microbiome through diet and lifestyle is reasonable and unlikely to cause harm when done appropriately.
Stress and nervous system regulation — because of the gut-brain axis connection, supporting your nervous system has a direct impact on digestive function. This is often underestimated.
Herbal medicine — as a Medical Herbalist, I work with individually tailored herbal prescriptions that may support inflammatory regulation, digestive comfort, gut motility, and stress resilience. Every prescription is specific to the person, because no two women experience endometriosis in exactly the same way.
Working with your medical team — if you haven't had your bowel properly assessed and you're experiencing significant gut symptoms, this is worth discussing with your GP or gynaecologist. Bowel endometriosis, SIBO, and other conditions can present similarly and may require specific investigation.
If you are experiencing significant, distressing bloating alongside other symptoms — particularly pelvic pain, painful periods, pain during intercourse, or fertility challenges — and you haven't yet been assessed for endometriosis, please do speak with your GP. Endometriosis is frequently missed and frequently misattributed to IBS. You deserve a thorough assessment.
Endometriosis bloating — endo belly — is a real, recognised, and often poorly explained symptom driven by a combination of inflammation, gut dysbiosis, hormonal changes, nervous system sensitisation, and the significant overlap between endometriosis and IBS.
It is not simply about what you eat. It is not something you simply have to tolerate. And understanding what's actually driving it is the first step toward finding support that actually helps.
What is endo belly and why does it happen? Endo belly is the term used in the endometriosis community to describe the severe abdominal distension — visible, often dramatic bloating — that many women with endometriosis experience. Unlike ordinary bloating caused by food, endo belly can appear rapidly, feel painful, and make clothing uncomfortable by the end of the day. It happens because endometriosis drives chronic inflammation in the peritoneal cavity, disrupts the gut microbiome, affects gut motility through hormonal and nervous system pathways, and shares significant overlap with IBS-type mechanisms. It is not simply a food sensitivity issue and it is not imagined.
Is endo belly the same as normal bloating? No — endo belly is distinct from ordinary functional bloating in both its severity and its underlying causes. Normal bloating is typically triggered by specific foods, resolves within a few hours, and is not associated with significant pain or visible distension. Endo belly can be dramatically visible, is often painful, may appear with little warning and without an obvious food trigger, and tends to worsen cyclically around menstruation. Women with endometriosis also experience visceral hypersensitivity — a sensitisation of the nervous system that makes normal digestive sensations feel disproportionately uncomfortable — which amplifies the experience of bloating beyond what would be expected from the physical distension alone.
Why does endometriosis cause gut symptoms if the lesions aren't on the bowel? This is one of the most important and least understood aspects of endometriosis. Research has identified a cross-organ effect in which nerve signalling from endometriotic tissue affects gut function through central nervous system pathways, even when lesions have not directly invaded the bowel. Additionally, the chronic inflammatory environment of endometriosis affects the peritoneal cavity — which houses the digestive organs — altering gut motility and intestinal permeability. The significant overlap between endometriosis and gut dysbiosis means that the gut microbiome is disrupted in many women with endometriosis regardless of whether they have bowel endometriosis specifically.
What is the connection between endometriosis and IBS? Research shows that women with endometriosis are twice as likely to be diagnosed with IBS compared to the general population. This is not coincidence — shared mechanisms including gut dysbiosis, immune dysfunction, visceral hypersensitivity, and altered gut motility appear to underpin both conditions. The overlap is so significant that endometriosis is frequently misdiagnosed as IBS, contributing to the average diagnostic delay of seven to ten years. If you have been told you have IBS but also experience painful periods, pelvic pain, or pain during sex, endometriosis should be formally investigated.
How does the menstrual cycle affect endo belly? Endo belly often worsens at specific points in the cycle because oestrogen and progesterone directly influence gut motility and intestinal function. In the luteal phase before menstruation, rising progesterone slows gut transit, which can worsen bloating and constipation. At menstruation, prostaglandins released to trigger the uterine lining to shed can stimulate the bowel, causing cramping, diarrhoea, and bloating simultaneously. In endometriosis, hormonal signalling is already dysregulated, making the gut more reactive throughout the entire cycle — not just around menstruation. Tracking when your bloating is worst relative to your cycle can provide valuable information for both management and diagnosis.
Can herbal medicine help with endo belly? Herbal medicine can provide meaningful support for endo belly when it addresses the underlying mechanisms rather than simply treating the symptom. Anti-inflammatory herbs including turmeric, boswellia, and ginger work on the inflammatory pathways that drive peritoneal inflammation in endometriosis. Bitter herbs and digestive tonics including dandelion root, artichoke leaf, and gentian support gut motility and liver function, which affects oestrogen clearance. Gut-supporting herbs and nutrients that address dysbiosis reduce the microbiome-driven component of endo belly. Nervous system herbs including chamomile, lemon balm, and valerian support the gut-brain axis. Every prescription is tailored to the individual because no two women experience endometriosis in exactly the same way.
What dietary approach helps most with endo belly? There is no single dietary approach that works for every woman with endometriosis, but several principles have evidence behind them. A low FODMAP elimination and reintroduction protocol has shown benefit for IBS-type symptoms in endometriosis including bloating and pain, though it is a short-term diagnostic tool rather than a permanent diet. An anti-inflammatory dietary approach — emphasising oily fish, olive oil, colourful vegetables, berries, and reduced processed food and refined sugar — addresses the underlying inflammatory drivers of the condition. Reducing dietary oestrogens and supporting liver detoxification through cruciferous vegetables, fibre, and adequate hydration helps regulate the hormonal component. Working with a practitioner who understands endometriosis will produce a more targeted approach than generic elimination diets.
These FAQ sections are written by Marie Mulcahy, NIMH-registered Medical Herbalist BSc (Hons), specialising in women's hormonal health including PCOS, endometriosis, PMDD, and perimenopause. For a personalised consultation visit mariemulcahyhormonehealthspecialist.co.uk
If you're living with endometriosis and would like a personalised, whole-person approach to your symptoms, you can find out more about how I work here or take the free hormone health quiz to get your personalised hormone picture.
Oxford Academic / Biology of Reproduction (2025) — Endometriosis: new insights and opportunities for relief of symptoms https://academic.oup.com/biolreprod/article/113/5/1029/8211700
Hearn-Yeates F, Horne AW, O'Mahony SM, Saunders PTK (2024) — The impact of the microbiota–gut–brain axis on endometriosis-associated symptoms: mechanisms and opportunities for personalised management strategies. Reproduction and Fertility, 5(2). https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11227073/
PMC (2025) — Gut Microbiota Dysbiosis in Endometriosis: A Potential Link to Inflammation and Disease Progression https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12153989/
PMC — Microbiota in Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Endometriosis: Birds of a Feather Flock Together — A Review https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10458414/
IBS Gut Health Clinic — Gut Health, Endometriosis and Dysbiosis https://ibsguthealthclinic.co.uk/gut-health-endometriosis-dysbiosis/