Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.
You changed your pad or tampon less than an hour ago and you can already feel it’s not going to hold. You’ve ruined underwear, trousers, even a chair. You’ve quietly kept a change of clothes at your desk, planned your commute around toilet stops, and sat through meetings in cold, quiet dread. If endometriosis heavy periods are disrupting your life in ways you can barely explain to other people, you are not being dramatic — and this is not normal bleeding that everyone else just “deals with”.
What nobody told you is that this kind of flooding is one of the most debilitating — and most under-recognised — features of endometriosis. This article explains why it happens, what to watch for, and what actually helps.
What’s Actually Happening: The River That Won’t Be Controlled
Think of a healthy period as a gently managed river: flow is steady, predictable, and the banks hold. In endometriosis, the river breaks its banks. Here’s why.
Endometriosis is a condition where tissue similar to the uterine lining grows outside the uterus — on the ovaries, fallopian tubes, bowel, bladder, or elsewhere. One of its key drivers is an excess of prostaglandins, inflammatory chemicals that tell the uterus to contract. More prostaglandins mean stronger, more prolonged contractions — and more shedding of the uterine lining. The result is heavier, longer, more painful bleeding.
Research also links endometriosis to higher levels of oestrogen relative to progesterone. Oestrogen thickens the uterine lining; without enough progesterone to balance it, that lining can become abnormally thick. When it sheds, it sheds heavily. Some women with endometriosis also develop adenomyosis — where similar tissue grows into the muscle wall of the uterus itself — which compounds heavy bleeding further.
The river isn’t broken because of anything you did. It’s running hard because of a hormonal and inflammatory environment that your body is caught in.
What “Heavy” Really Means — and Why It’s So Often Dismissed
Clinically, heavy menstrual bleeding means soaking through a pad or tampon every hour for several hours, passing clots larger than a 10p coin, or bleeding for more than seven days. Many women with endometriosis experience all three.
But the reason this gets dismissed so often is that women have been told period pain and heavy bleeding are just part of being a woman. GPs may attribute flooding to stress, weight changes, or simply “bad periods.” The average time to an endometriosis diagnosis in the UK is still around eight years, according to Endometriosis UK. Eight years of flooding. Eight years of being told it’s fine.
It is not fine, and it is not something to push through.
The Physical Toll
Heavy blood loss depletes iron, which leads to anaemia — fatigue so profound it can feel like a different illness entirely. You may feel breathless, dizzy, unable to concentrate. If your periods have been heavy for years, iron-deficiency anaemia may have become your baseline, so normal may actually feel far below well.
The Emotional and Social Toll
Flooding is also deeply isolating. The mental load of managing unpredictable, heavy bleeding — the planning, the anxiety, the shame of accidents — is exhausting in ways that rarely get named. Avoiding social events, skipping work, withdrawing from exercise you love: these losses matter. If heavy periods are affecting your mental health and daily quality of life, that is a legitimate medical concern, not a character flaw.
What Endometriosis Heavy Periods Are Often Mistaken For
Because flooding is such a common complaint, it can be attributed to other conditions before anyone thinks to look for endometriosis. These include:
- Fibroids — non-cancerous growths in or around the uterus that also cause heavy bleeding; endometriosis and fibroids can coexist.
- Adenomyosis — as noted above, closely related to endometriosis and often occurring alongside it.
- Thyroid disorders — an underactive thyroid can cause heavier periods; worth ruling out with a blood test.
- PCOS — can cause irregular and sometimes heavy periods, though for different hormonal reasons. You can read more about how PCOS affects the menstrual cycle if you’re unsure which fits your picture.
- Hormonal IUD removal or absence of contraception — sometimes heavy bleeding is attributed to coming off hormonal contraception, which can mask endometriosis symptoms for years.
Getting the right diagnosis matters because the treatments differ. Endometriosis requires a specific clinical pathway, and flooding alone is not enough to confirm it — but it is more than enough reason to ask for a proper investigation.
What Actually Helps
There is no single cure for endometriosis, but there are real, evidence-based options that can significantly reduce flooding. A clinician will work with you to find what fits your situation, your reproductive plans, and your history.
Lifestyle and Self-Management
- Iron supplementation — if your periods are heavy, ask your GP to check your ferritin levels, not just your haemoglobin. Many women with endometriosis are iron-depleted long before they are technically anaemic. Eating iron-rich foods (red meat, lentils, leafy greens) alongside vitamin C helps absorption.
- Heat and pain management — a heat pad won’t reduce blood flow, but it can ease the cramping that accompanies it. Some women find anti-inflammatory pain relief (such as ibuprofen, if tolerated) taken regularly throughout their period reduces both pain and flow slightly, because NSAIDs work against prostaglandins.
- Period products designed for heavy flow — menstrual cups and period underwear can provide more reliable coverage for flooding, reducing the anxiety of leaks.
Non-Hormonal Medical Options
- Tranexamic acid — a non-hormonal prescription medication that helps blood clot more effectively in the uterus. The NHS recommends it as a first-line option for heavy menstrual bleeding. It is taken only during your period and does not affect fertility.
- NSAIDs (e.g. mefenamic acid) — prescribed-strength anti-inflammatories that can reduce prostaglandin production, cutting both pain and flow.
Hormonal and Medical Treatments
- The hormonal IUS (e.g. Mirena) — a small device fitted in the uterus that releases a low level of progestogen locally. It often reduces or stops periods altogether and is recommended by NICE as an effective option for heavy bleeding in endometriosis.
- Combined oral contraceptive pill — can thin the lining and reduce flow significantly, and is often used to manage endometriosis symptoms.
- GnRH analogues — stronger hormonal treatments that temporarily suppress the menstrual cycle; typically used for more severe disease under specialist care.
- Surgery — laparoscopic excision of endometriosis deposits, performed by a specialist, can reduce symptoms including heavy bleeding, though it is not always a permanent fix. For information on the pain and surgical treatment pathway for endometriosis, that piece goes into more detail.
A specialist in endometriosis — not just a general gynaecologist — gives you the best chance of a treatment plan that addresses the root cause rather than just the symptom.
When to See a Doctor
See your GP promptly if:
- You are soaking through a pad or tampon in under an hour for two or more hours in a row.
- You are passing large clots (bigger than a 50p piece).
- Your period lasts more than seven days regularly.
- You feel faint, breathless, or exhausted during or after your period.
- Heavy bleeding is affecting your ability to work, socialise, or exercise.
- You suspect you may have endometriosis but have never been investigated.
You are allowed to say, clearly: “My bleeding is this heavy, it is affecting my life, and I want to be investigated for endometriosis.” If you are dismissed, ask to be referred to a gynaecologist or an accredited endometriosis centre. You are not making a fuss. You are asking for basic care.
Frequently Asked Questions
This article is for general information and is not medical advice. It was reviewed by a certified healthcare professional in line with our editorial policy, and we update our content as the science evolves — but every woman’s body is different, so please speak to a qualified healthcare professional about your own symptoms.