Which one is worse—endometriosis or PCOS? It’s like asking, “How would you prefer to get screwed up?” Would you rather have a chainsaw slowly tearing through your pelvis every month (endometriosis), or a metabolic gremlin hijacking your hormones, making you grow a beard while your ovaries turn into a graveyard of half-formed eggs (PCOS)?
Both conditions are brutal in their own ways, wrecking fertility, causing chronic pain, and messing with your mental health. But which one is truly worse? Let’s break it down.
Understanding the Two Nightmares
Endometriosis: The Silent Chainsaw
Endometriosis is like a horror movie where your uterine lining goes rogue, growing outside the uterus—on your ovaries, bowels, even your diaphragm. Every month, this misplaced tissue bleeds, causing inflammation, scarring, and pain so severe some women pass out.
Key Symptoms:
Periods that feel like being stabbed from the inside
Painful sex (like a knife twisting in your pelvis)
Infertility due to scar tissue strangling your reproductive organs
Bowel and bladder issues (because why not?)
PCOS: The Hormonal Gremlin
PCOS is your body betraying you in slow motion—your ovaries hoard tiny cysts, your hormones go haywire, and insulin resistance turns your metabolism against you. You might grow a beard, struggle with acne, and watch the scale climb no matter what you do.
Key Symptoms:
Irregular or missing periods (your uterus just ghosts you)
Unwanted hair growth (hello, sideburns and chin stragglers)
Weight gain that feels impossible to fight
Fertility struggles because your eggs refuse to leave their cozy cysts
Which Is Worse? The Showdown
Category
Endometriosis
PCOS
Verdict
Pain
“Being filleted alive” during periods
Constant nagging discomfort (or sudden pain if cysts burst)
Endometriosis vs PCOS: 10 Crucial Differences (According to Women Who Survived Both)
Endometriosis involves rogue uterine tissue growing outside the uterus, causing severe pelvic pain, while PCOS is a metabolic disorder causing hormonal imbalances, cysts, and insulin resistance.
Think of endo as a horror movie where your organs are glued together, and PCOS as your hormones playing Jenga with your metabolism.
Clinical studies show endometriosis pain ranks comparable to labor pain on standardized scales, while PCOS pain is typically milder unless ovarian cysts rupture. A 2022 Journal of Women’s Health study found:
73% of endometriosis patients report pain levels ≥7/10 during periods
PCOS patients average 4-5/10 pain from cramping/bloating
Translation: Endo feels like being stabbed with a rusty spoon. PCOS is more of a persistent existential dread.
Endometriosis causes physical blockages (scar tissue, adhesions) preventing conception, while PCOS prevents ovulation due to hormonal dysfunction. Key differences:
Factor
Endometriosis
PCOS
Pregnancy Rate (Untreated)
2-4% monthly
5-10% monthly
Most Effective Treatment
Laparoscopic surgery
Ovulation induction
Both can be fertility thieves, but PCOS is more responsive to treatment – your eggs are just lazy, not trapped in scar tissue.
Yes, and it’s the reproductive system equivalent of getting struck by lightning while being mauled by a bear. Studies suggest:
12-20% overlap rate in diagnosed patients
Shared genetic markers on chromosomes 9 and 10
Common inflammatory pathways worsen both conditions
Symptoms combine the worst of both worlds: debilitating pain + metabolic chaos. Diagnosis often takes longer because symptoms mask each other.
PCOS weight gain is caused by insulin resistance (storing fat easily) while endo weight comes from inflammation and bloating:
Pattern
PCOS
Endometriosis
Primary Area
Abdomen (visceral fat)
Pelvic bloating
Ease of Loss
Extremely difficult
Possible with anti-inflammatory diet
PCOS makes your body cling to fat like a jealous ex. Endo makes you look 6 months pregnant whenever it pleases.
PCOS diagnosis requires meeting 2 of 3 Rotterdam criteria (irregular periods, high androgens, polycystic ovaries). Endometriosis definitively requires laparoscopic surgery, creating a diagnostic odyssey:
Average diagnosis delay: PCOS (2 years) vs Endo (7-10 years)
False negatives: 20% of endo lesions don’t show on imaging
Getting diagnosed with PCOS is like a bad blind date – obvious quickly. Endo diagnosis is like a murder mystery where you’re the victim.
PCOS treatments focus on managing insulin resistance and hormones, while endometriosis treatments aim to reduce inflammation and surgically remove lesions:
Approach
PCOS
Endometriosis
First-line
Metformin + diet
NSAIDs + birth control
Surgical
Rare (ovarian drilling)
Common (excision surgery)
Recurrence Rate
Managed chronically
20-40% post-surgery
PCOS is a lifelong metabolic tug-of-war. Endo is a game of whack-a-mole with lesions.
Both increase cancer risk through different mechanisms:
Endometriosis: 1.5-2x higher ovarian cancer risk (endometrioid/clear cell types)
PCOS: 2-3x higher endometrial cancer risk (from unopposed estrogen)
Shared risk: Both associated with slightly higher breast cancer incidence
Monitoring recommendations differ:
Screening
Frequency
Endo: Pelvic ultrasound
Annual
PCOS: Endometrial biopsy
If no period >3 months
Both conditions double depression risk compared to the general population, but through different pathways:
Sarah is a freelance Visual Designer. Sarah’s PCOS diagnosis in 2022 sparked her mission to bridge gaps in women’s health. Merging her design expertise with lived experience, she co-founded Her Body Matters—a vibrant community championing PCOS education, raw conversations, and actionable resources.