Health Conditions
Wellness & Self-Care
Nutrition & Fitness
News
Product Reviews
Find a Doctor
Tools & Resources
About Us
Health Conditions
Health Conditions
Find helpful content on common health and medical conditions.
See All
CancerCardiovascular DiseasesCrohn's DiseaseEczema (Atopic Dermatitis)MenopauseMental Health Conditions
MigrainePsoriasisRheumatoid ArthritisSkin ConditionsType 2 DiabetesWeight Management
Wellness and Self Care
Wellness & Self-Care
Explore wellness and self-care topics for your physical and mental well-being.
See All
First AidHealthy LivingHeart HealthMental HealthSkin Care
Skin Care RoutinesSkin Treatments & ProceduresStressTherapy
Nutrition and Fitness
Nutrition & Fitness
Explore topics in nutrition and fitness that impact overall health, well-being, and energy.
See All
Diet & NutritionDiet TypesFitnessHealthy Recipes
Mediterranean DietKetogenic DietNutritional SupplementsWorkouts & Activities
News
Stay updated with the latest health and medical news.
See All
Featured stories
Reddit Users Are Reporting GLP-1 Side Effects Not Captured in Clinical Trials
Could a Shift in Attitude Affect Your Dementia Risk?
Millions of Eye Drop Bottles May Be Contaminated, Prompting Nationwide Recall
Product Reviews
Product Reviews
Learn about the best products to support your health and wellness.
See All
Wellness ProductsBest Methylated VitaminsBest Vitamin D3Best Berberine Supplements
Best Magnesium SupplementsBest Online TherapyBest GLP-1 OnlineBest Fiber Supplements
Find a Doctor
Find a Doctor
Find the best doctors for you that are near you.
See All
CardiologistDermatologistGastroenterologistOB/GYN
Orthopedic SurgeonPediatricianPrimary Care
Tools and Resources
Tools & Resources
Discover tools and resources designed to support your health journey.
See All
Body Type QuizCheck In, Check UpFiber CalculatorHydration CalculatorNews
Protein CalculatorSymptom CheckerTippi - Everyday TipsVideosWeight Loss Calculator
About Us
About Us
Learn about our award-winning editorial team, health content leaders, and more.
See All
Contact UsEditorial PolicyHealth Expert NetworkPress Center
Product Testing PolicyWho We AreTrusted Health Resources
Women's HealthEndometriosis
Endometriosis
Learn more about endometriosis, from the earliest symptoms to the latest treatment methods. Find out who's most at risk of this uterine condition and what can be done to relieve heavy bleeding and abdominal pain.
LEARN MORE
  • 1What Is Endometriosis? Symptoms, Causes, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Prevention
  • 2Signs and Symptoms of Endometriosis
  • 3How Is Endometriosis Diagnosed?
  • 4Endometriosis Treatment: Medication, Lifestyle Changes, and More
  • 5What Is Bowel Endometriosis?
  • 6Types and Stages of Endometriosis
SEE MORE

These 14 Stars Are Transcending the Pain of Endometriosis

1 in 10 women live with endometriosis, and many famous women are using their public platform to build awareness of this misunderstood disease.
By
Cathy Garrard and Brianna Majsiak
Updated on June 1, 2023
by
John Paul McHugh, MD
Stars-Are-Transcending-the-Pain-of-Endometriosis-00-ALT-RM-1440x810
Chrissy Teigen, Mandy Moore, and Tia Mowry-Hardrict advocate for women with endometriosis.
Shutterstock; Getty Images; AP Photo

Celebrities often keep quiet about their health problems, but in the case of endometriosis, a number of women have spoken out loudly — and even proudly — about this silent condition. Endometriosis, which occurs when tissue like the endometrial tissue that lines the womb grows outside the uterus, often goes undiagnosed. And so women like Amy Schumer, Padma Lakshmi, and Lena Dunham have been raising awareness so that other women don’t have to suffer in silence.

RELATED: How to Find an Endometriosis Specialist

Endometriosis is often correlated with an increased amount of estrogen circulating in a woman’s body. Researchers still aren’t sure whether the increased estrogen is a cause or effect of endometriosis, but it’s thought that genetics may be a factor in the onset of endometriosis.

According to the World Health Organization, about 10 percent of women worldwide have the condition, and the experience is different for everyone.

Some women with endometriosis don’t experience any symptoms, while others have pelvic pain so severe that it interferes with bowel movements, urination, and sexual intercourse. This pain often gets worse during menstruation.

While there’s currently no cure for endometriosis, the pain and other symptoms can be reduced through: surgery to remove painful tissue; hormone therapy, such as oral contraception; pain medication, such as NSAIDs; and GnRH therapies, like elagolix (Orilissa) and leuprolide (Lupron).

Complementary approaches include exercise, herbal enemas, acupuncture, and dietary changes, such as eating less red meat and more fresh fruit and vegetables.

If you have pelvic or lower abdominal pain or heavy periods, talk to your doctor right away. And if you live with endometriosis, you can learn how to thrive from these outspoken celebrities.

1

Amy Schumer

Celebrities-with-Endometriosis-RM-Amy-Schumer-722x406
Matt Baron/Shutterstock

The comedian and Trainwreck star Amy Schumer is hilarious, but she’s not joking around about endometriosis. In a 2019 episode of Dr. Berlin’s Informed Pregnancy Podcast, she spoke frankly about why she needed a C-section to deliver her son, Gene.

“I was throwing up through the first hour of my C-section. It’s supposed to take about an hour and a half — mine took over three hours because of my endometriosis,” revealed Schumer, “and that was really scary.”

In an Instagram post while she was still pregnant, Schumer criticized how little funding endometriosis gets. “Amy is still pregnant and puking because money rarely goes to medical studies for women such as [on] hyperemesis [gravidarum] or endometriosis and instead goes to things like dicks not getting hard enough or old guys who want harder dicks.”

Next up video playing in 10 seconds

4 Causes and Risk Factors of Endometriosis

Here are the causes and risk factors you need to know when it comes to Endometriosis.
2

Tia Mowry-Hardrict

Stars-Are-Transcending-the-Pain-of-Endometriosis-RM-Tia-Mowry-1440x810
Xavier Collin/AP Photo

After more than a decade of painful symptoms and multiple surgeries, actress and YouTube star Tia Mowry-Hardrict penned an essay for Women’s Health to shine a light on her experience — particularly what it’s like to be a Black woman living with endo.

“I thought I was alone because no one I knew personally had dealt with this. And then I realized: I’d never really seen someone African American in the public eye talking about endometriosis or their struggles with infertility,” she wrote. “And when you don’t know or see anyone else who looks like you talking about what you’re going through, you feel alone and suffer in silence.”

The cookbook author is also active on her Instagram account bringing awareness about the inequitable treatment Black women receive when faced with this disease — and sending messages of hope. “After some dietary changes, and focusing on my health and wellness, I was able to make becoming a mother a reality for me. Not just once, but twice. So here’s to all my endo sisters — continue to hope and continue to heal!” she wrote in a post highlighting her pregnancy.

RELATED: Essential Fertility Facts for Women and Men

3

Lena Dunham

Lena Dunham
Jackson Lee/Getty Images

In early 2018, the Girls creator and star penned an article for Vogue describing her decision to have a hysterectomy at age 31 to relieve excruciating symptoms caused by endometriosis. Dunham had lived with the disease for a decade and had gone through eight surgical procedures to treat it.

Explaining her decision to make the drastic surgical choice, she writes: “I know that a hysterectomy isn’t the right choice for everyone ... that it’s not a guarantee that this pain will disappear, and that you are performing it due to your deeply held, essential and — to my mind — feminist belief that women should be able to make a choice about how they want to spend their childbearing years.”

RELATED: Hysterectomy: Do You Really Need It?

4

Padma Lakshmi

Padma Lakshmi
David Livingston/Getty Images

From early adolescence, Padma Lakshmi, the Emmy-nominated actress and Top Chef host, suffered intense pain, cramping, nausea, backache, fatigue, and excessive blood flow that debilitated her for a week every single month. It took more than 20 years for her to get a diagnosis, even though she had good health insurance and access to the best doctors.

Her experience led her to cofound the Endometriosis Foundation of America in 2009, becoming the first celebrity to bring this condition into the spotlight. She teamed up with the doctor who finally diagnosed her, Tamer Seckin, MD. “I didn’t want the next generation of women to go through what I went through, to feel betrayed by their own bodies or to feel alone,” she says on the organization’s website.

5

Chrissy Teigen

Stars-Are-Transcending-the-Pain-of-Endometriosis-RM-Chrissy-Teigen-1440x810
AFF-USA/Shutterstock

Cravings cookbook author Chrissy Teigen bravely took to Twitter in February 2021 to share that four months after suffering a pregnancy loss, she was having surgery to treat endometriosis. And she did what any advocate does best: She asked fellow endo warriors for their recovery tips.

“I truly feel kicks in my belly, but it’s not phantom. I have surgery for endometriosis tomorrow ... but the period feeling this month is exactly like baby kicks. Sigh,” she wrote on Twitter.

Right before laparoscopic excision surgery, she shared a hospital selfie in her Instagram stories and wrote, “Endometriosis surgery please endo this pain lol lol lol.”

The Lip Sync Battle cohost candidly shared that it was a difficult healing process, “whole belly’s got numbed … It makes it hard, every little cough and stuff … But it is truly still better than the contractions and the pain of endo.”

She also shared a post-surgery photo on Twitter of her bandaged abdomen and later her scars. Many endometriosis patients replied to Teigen’s tweets sharing that they too had surgery for endometriosis and offered advice for finding comfort as the incisions heal.

RELATED: 18 Celebrities Who Spoke Out About Their Miscarriages

6

Mandy Moore

Stars-Are-Transcending-the-Pain-of-Endometriosis-RM-Mandy-Moore-1440x810
Mark Ralston/Getty Images

Mandy Moore, the This Is Us star, opened up about how she almost underwent surgery for endometriosis before discovering that she was pregnant.

“Because of the issue with my uterus, I was very hesitant to believe it and put any stock in it,” Moore told Romper in 2021.

Moore explains that after trying for a baby for a while, she consulted with a fertility specialist who suspected that she may have endometriosis. The doctor recommended that she have surgery before carrying a child.

“I was fully prepared to go have surgery and fix my uterus and hopefully get rid of the endometriosis, if it was there,” she said in the interview.

7

Alexa Chung

Celebrities-with-Endometriosis-RM-Alexa-Chung-722x406
Samir Hussein/Getty Images

Last July, the model and designer Alexa Chung shared a picture of herself on Instagram that was a little less glamorous than some of her others: She was standing in a hospital corridor. Giving a double thumbs-up, she shared, “I don’t want to belong to any club that would accept me as a member, but here I am. #endometriosisclub #lifelongmembership #sorryifyouhaveittooitsucks #endometriosisawareness”

The post, which has more than 65,000 likes, sparked an outpouring of support from women with the same condition.

8

Julianne Hough

Julianne Hough
Noel Vasquez/Getty Images

When Julianne Hough was a teenager, several doctors wrote off her concerns that her heavy and painful periods were a medical problem. “They all said what I was experiencing was normal,” says Hough, a professional dancer, former Dancing With the Stars performer, and judge on America’s Got Talent. “I just thought, ‘This is what it’s like to be a woman.’ Everyone talked about bad cramps. I didn’t realize at the time that mine were worse.”

After finally getting a diagnosis years — and two laparoscopic surgeries — later, Hough sticks to the basics when her severe abdominal pain flares up. “As simple as this may sound, I soak in the bathtub with Epsom salts. It’s a psychological thing, too, because I put energy and love in the area that hurts,” she says.

In 2018, Hough froze some of her eggs, aware that endometriosis can make it more difficult to conceive naturally.

9

Halsey

Halsey
Michael Loccisano/Getty Images

Ashley Nicolette Frangipane — the 25-year-old Grammy-nominated singer known professionally as Halsey — has boldly taken to Twitter to share her experience with the disease. In 2019, in a since deleted Twitter post, she revealed that she’s had three miscarriages, four surgeries, and pain pretty much every day of her life. “I’ve donated/raised upwards of $300,000 in the name of research and support [to endometriosis]. I’m not trying to be quirky. Or different. I’m just trying to normalize an underdiscussed illness.”

10

Whoopi Goldberg

Whoopi Goldberg
Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

The actress, comedian, and talk show host Whoopi Goldberg was diagnosed with endometriosis nearly 40 years ago, and she considers herself very lucky to have found a doctor who diagnosed her and helped treat it. So she was surprised when she discovered how few women had even heard of the disease, including her own daughter.

At the Endometriosis Foundation of America’s Blossom Ball in 2009, Goldberg said, “There is nothing dirty about it. No religious group is going to be pissed if you discuss this. Because if you don’t discuss it, many more women are going to find themselves unable to have children, or find themselves close to dying because [the disease has] led to something else.”

11

Susan Sarandon

Susan Sarandon
Anthony Harvey/Getty Images

Speaking in a video for the Endometriosis Foundation of America, the actress and activist Susan Sarandon said that she spent years suffering with the condition and “thinking of myself as someone who was weak and somewhat hysterical.” She imagined that the pain was just part of being a woman, and there was nothing to be done about it. Sarandon also acknowledged in her characteristically candid way that it affected not just the way she saw herself but her relationships as well. “Endometriosis was definitely another character in any relationship that I had,” she said.

RELATED: What Is Silent Endometriosis?

12

Daisy Ridley

Daisy Ridley
Vianney Le Caer/AP Photo

The Star Wars actress was diagnosed when she was just 15, and her symptoms flared in 2015 because of the stress of rising stardom following her performance in the hit movie franchise. “I was in my flat going nuts, and then my skin got really bad with the stress of it all, and I hadn’t been well,” she told ELLE Australia.

In a since-deleted Instagram post, Ridley had this message for her followers: “Any of you who are suffering with anything, go to a doctor; pay for a specialist; get your hormones tested, get allergy testing; keep on top of how your body is feeling, and don’t worry about sounding like a hypochondriac. From your head to the tips of your toes we only have one body, let us all make sure ours are working in tip top condition, and take help if it’s needed.”

RELATED: Speaking Endometriosis: A Glossary of Terms Used to Describe Symptoms, Tests, Treatments, and More

13

Alaia Baldwin Aronow

Celebrities-with-Endometriosis-08-RM-Alaia-Baldwin-Aronow-722x406
Lev Radin/Alamy

The daughter of Stephen Baldwin and sister of Hailey Bieber was diagnosed with endometriosis in 2016, according to the Endometriosis Foundation of America. Since then, Aronow has been been posting about her battle with endometriosis on Instagram to help educate others and create a community of support. In March 2019, she shared a photo of her surgical scars with her followers as a “way to bring a small glimpse of the reality of living with this disease.”

Aronow also serves as a junior board member of the Endometriosis Foundation of America and was one of the honored guests at the 10th Annual Blossom Ball, which raises money for the endometriosis community.

14

Molly Qerim

Celebrities-with-Endometriosis-09-RM-Molly-Qerim-722x406
Larry Busacca/Getty Images

ESPN host Molly Qerim had never heard of endometriosis before she was diagnosed with the painful condition eight years ago and was told that it had spread throughout her body. “The endometriosis was not just in my reproductive organs, it was everywhere,” Querim told the ABC News anchor Amy Robach on Good Morning America in 2018. “It had all compiled into a cyst, which burst,” she said. “And then the toxins were all in my body.”

Qerim, who has stage 4 endometriosis, has often had to hide her fatigue, pelvic pain, and bloating while appearing on live television. She manages her disease by practicing self-care. “I have to really be diligent about getting my sleep, getting eight hours a night, limiting alcohol and sugar, and getting acupuncture once a week,” Qerim told the Endometriosis Foundation of America’s blog The Blossom in a 2018 interview.

Related Galleries

5 Promising Supplements for Menopausal Symptoms
5 Promising Supplements for Menopausal Symptoms
menopause5 Promising Supplements for Menopausal SymptomsMedically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | March 27, 2026
The Best Foods for Women During Menopause
The Best Foods for Women During Menopause
menopauseThe Best Foods for Women During MenopauseMedically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | March 10, 2026
12 Ways to Beat Menopausal Belly Fat
12 Ways to Beat Menopausal Belly Fat
menopause12 Ways to Beat Menopausal Belly FatMedically Reviewed by Justin Laube, MD | March 10, 2026
7 Drinks for Vaginal Health
7 Drinks for Vaginal Health
vaginal health & conditions7 Drinks for Vaginal HealthMedically Reviewed by Kayli Anderson, RDN | September 2, 2025
Meet Our Experts
See Our Editorial PolicyMeet Our Health Expert Network
John-Paul-McHugh-bio

John Paul McHugh, MD

Medical Reviewer
Member of American College of Lifestyle Medicine

John Paul McHugh, MD, is an obstetrician-gynecologist and lifestyle medicine specialist in southern California. He has always placed wellness at the center of his work, in both del...

See full bio

Cathy Garrard

Author
Cathy Garrard is a journalist with more than two decades of experience writing and editing health content. Her work has appeared in print and online for clients such as UnitedHealt...
See full bio

Brianna Majsiak

Author

In her role as an editor, Brianna writes and edits content around breast cancer, gynecological cancer, and hereditary cancer risk. She received her master of science degree from Co...

See full bio
See Our Editorial PolicyMeet Our Health Expert Network
EDITORIAL SOURCES
Everyday Health follows strict sourcing guidelines to ensure the accuracy of its content, outlined in our editorial policy. We use only trustworthy sources, including peer-reviewed studies, board-certified medical experts, patients with lived experience, and information from top institutions.
Additional Sources
  • Endometriosis. World Health Organization. March 24, 2023.
  • Yamamoto A, Harris HR, Vitonis AF, et al. A Prospective Cohort Study of Meat and Fish Consumption and Endometriosis Risk. American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology. August 2018.
  • Harris HR, Eke AC, Chavarro JE, Missmer SA. Fruit and Vegetable Consumption and Risk of Endometriosis. Human Reproduction. April 1, 2018.
  • Amy Schumer — Hyperemesis Gravidarum. Dr. Berlin’s Informed Pregnancy Project. December 26, 2019.
  • Bacharach E. Amy Schumer Says She’s ‘Still Puking’ During Pregnancy Due to Lack of Medical Research for Women. Women’s Health. April 23, 2019.
  • Tia Mowry: “My Extreme Pelvic Pain Turned Out to Be Endometriosis.” Women’s Health. October 29, 2018.
  • TiaMowry. Instagram. March 1, 2021.
  • In Her Own Words: Lena Dunham on Her Decision to Have a Hysterectomy at 31. Vogue. February 14, 2018.
  • Padma Lakshmi’s Personal Cause: The Endometriosis Foundation of America — Women’s Health. Endometriosis Foundation of America. March 12, 2015.
  • Chrissy Teigen. Twitter. February 3, 2021.
  • Shafrir D. It’s Getting Real for Mandy Moore. Romper. January 27, 2021.
  • AlexaChung. Instagram. July 18, 2019.
  • Chiu M. Brooks Laich Says Julianne Hough Was a ‘Warrior’ During ‘Super Challenging’ IVF Process. People. July 2, 2019.
  • Zoellner D. ‘I’m in Pain Every Day of My Life’: Halsey Reveals She’s Suffered a Total of Three Miscarriages as She Gets Candid With Fans About the Brutal Realities of Her Ongoing Struggle With Endometriosis. Daily Mail. March 27, 2019.
  • Blossom Ball 2009 — Whoopi Goldberg. Endometriosis Foundation of America. November 27, 2009.
  • My Name Is You. Endometriosis Foundation of America. May 2, 2015.
  • Clarke J. Feel the Force: Daisy Ridley Covers ELLE’s January Issue. ELLE Australia. December 27, 2017.
  • Papisova V. Daisy Ridley Posts Inspiring Instagram About Living With This Painful Disorder. Teen Vogue. June 9, 2016.
  • Alaia Baldwin: EndoFound Ambassador. Endometriosis Foundation of America.
  • Thorbecke C. ESPN Sports Anchor Molly Qerim Opens Up About Endometriosis to Help Others ‘Feel Like They’re Not Alone.’ ABC News. April 17, 2018.
  • ESPN’s Molly Qerim: Managing Endometriosis Is Like a “Second Job.” Endometriosis Foundation of America. April 12, 2018.
Women's Health
Sign up for our Women's Health Newsletter!
By subscribing you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
RELATED ARTICLES
See all in Endometriosis
Endometriosis Treatment: Medication, Lifestyle Changes, and More
treatment tools
EndometriosisEndometriosis Treatment: Medication, Lifestyle Changes, and MoreMedically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | Feb 11, 2026
Signs and Symptoms of Endometriosis
nauseous woman in yellow shirt with hand on head and pelvis with pain in the pelvis and lower abdomen and toilet on yellow
EndometriosisSigns and Symptoms of EndometriosisMedically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | Jul 20, 2025
What Is Stage 4 Endometriosis?
woman sitting at a conference table at work in abdominal pain
EndometriosisWhat Is Stage 4 Endometriosis?Medically Reviewed by John Paul McHugh, MD | Apr 22, 2025
What Is Deep Infiltrating Endometriosis? Causes, Symptoms, Treatment, and More
a medical illustration depicting the pelvic floor, specifically infiltrating endometriosis
EndometriosisWhat Is Deep Infiltrating Endometriosis? Causes, Symptoms, Treatment, and MoreMedically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | Jan 28, 2025
Types and Stages of Endometriosis
woman holding her lower abdomen in pain
EndometriosisTypes and Stages of EndometriosisMedically Reviewed by John Paul McHugh, MD | Apr 12, 2024
Endometriosis and Black Women: What You Need to Know
trouble getting diagnosed as a black woman
EndometriosisEndometriosis and Black Women: What You Need to KnowMedically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | Jun 30, 2023
Adenomyosis: Symptoms, Diagnosis, Causes, and Treatments
Illustration of Adenomyosis
EndometriosisAdenomyosis: Symptoms, Diagnosis, Causes, and TreatmentsMedically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | Jun 06, 2023
Experiences With Endometriosis
experience-with-endo-2023-1440x810
EndometriosisExperiences With EndometriosisMedically Reviewed by Kacy Church, MD | May 31, 2023
7 Self-Care Tips for Women Who Have Endometriosis
7 Self-Care Tips for Women Who Have Endometriosis
Endometriosis7 Self-Care Tips for Women Who Have EndometriosisMedically Reviewed by John Paul McHugh, MD | May 18, 2023
7 Ways to Boost Your Sex Life When You Have Endometriosis
7 Ways to Boost Your Sex Life When You Have Endometriosis
Endometriosis7 Ways to Boost Your Sex Life When You Have EndometriosisMedically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | Apr 27, 2023
4 Ways Exercise Can Help Endometriosis
a woman stretching before exercise
Endometriosis4 Ways Exercise Can Help EndometriosisMedically Reviewed by John Paul McHugh, MD | Apr 25, 2023
What Is Endometriosis? Symptoms, Causes, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Prevention
Endometriosis
EndometriosisWhat Is Endometriosis? Symptoms, Causes, Diagnosis, Treatment, and PreventionMedically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | Apr 22, 2023
Excision Surgery: An Effective Treatment for Endometriosis You've Probably Never Heard About
woman speaking to surgeon about endometriosis excision
EndometriosisExcision Surgery: An Effective Treatment for Endometriosis You've Probably Never Heard AboutMedically Reviewed by John Paul McHugh, MD | Apr 20, 2023
What Is Bowel Endometriosis?
What Is Bowel Endometriosis?
EndometriosisWhat Is Bowel Endometriosis?Medically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | Nov 07, 2022
Endometriosis and Painful Sex: How to Cope
illustration showing endometriosis in the body
EndometriosisEndometriosis and Painful Sex: How to CopeMedically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | Sep 18, 2022
FDA Approves Myfembree for Endometriosis Pain in Premenopausal Women
MyFembree-Approved-for-Endometriosis-Pain-1440x810
EndometriosisFDA Approves Myfembree for Endometriosis Pain in Premenopausal WomenUpdated on Aug 09, 2022
Endometriosis May Raise Risk of Stroke, Study Finds
woman with cramps
EndometriosisEndometriosis May Raise Risk of Stroke, Study FindsPublished on Jul 25, 2022
Endometriosis Awareness Month: March 2022
March-Is-Endometriosis-Awareness-2022-article
EndometriosisEndometriosis Awareness Month: March 2022Medically Reviewed by Kara Smythe, MD | Mar 09, 2022
Does Low Testosterone Cause Endometriosis?
woman with cramps laying on grass
EndometriosisDoes Low Testosterone Cause Endometriosis?Updated on May 28, 2021
5 Simple Yoga Moves for Endometriosis and Pelvic Pain Relief
a woman doing yoga at home
Endometriosis5 Simple Yoga Moves for Endometriosis and Pelvic Pain ReliefMedically Reviewed by Kacy Church, MD | Apr 10, 2019
Wellness inspired. Wellness enabled.
A PROPERTY OFEveryday Health GroupEHGLogo
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Meet Our Health Expert Network
  • Consumer Health Data Privacy Policy
  • Careers
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information
  • Contact Us
  • Press Center
  • All Health Topics
  • Popular Topics
  • Drugs & Supplements
  • AdChoices
NEWSLETTERS
Get the best in health and wellness
By subscribing you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
© 1996-2026 Everyday Health, Inc., a Ziff Davis company. All rights reserved. Everyday Health is among the federally registered trademarks of Everyday Health, Inc. and may not be used by third parties without explicit permission.All information on the Everyday Health website is for informational purposes only, and is not intended to be used for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. For more details, see Everyday Health's Terms of Use.
TRUSTe Verified PrivacyBadges