Can Endometriosis Be Missed On Ultrasound? | Scan Limits

Yes, pelvic ultrasound can miss small or surface lesions, so a normal result doesn’t rule endometriosis out.

A “normal” ultrasound can feel confusing when cramps, pelvic pain, bowel trouble during periods, or pain during sex keep showing up. Ultrasound is useful, but it has blind spots. It can spot some patterns of endometriosis well, and it can miss others completely.

This guide explains what ultrasound can and can’t pick up, why misses happen, and what a sensible next step looks like when symptoms don’t match the report.

What Ultrasound Can Realistically Detect

Ultrasound shows anatomy and movement. It does not show microscopic implants, and it often can’t see thin surface lesions. In routine practice, pelvic ultrasound does best with ovarian endometriomas (endometriosis-related cysts) and some deep endometriosis when the scan is done with targeted steps.

Why A “Normal” Scan Can Still Fit With Endometriosis

A normal scan often means no large cyst or mass was seen. That’s helpful, but it’s not a verdict. UK guidance warns that a negative scan should not end the workup when symptoms still point strongly toward endometriosis. That stance is laid out in the NICE guideline on endometriosis diagnosis and management.

Surface lesions can blend into surrounding tissue, and some locations are hard to image well (behind the uterus, high on the pelvic sidewall, on the bowel surface, near nerves). A routine scan may never get a clean window there.

Can Endometriosis Be Missed On Ultrasound? What A Negative Scan Means

Yes. A negative pelvic ultrasound means “no clear ultrasound signs were seen today.” It does not mean “endometriosis is absent.” Deep disease can still be missed if the scan stays limited to a basic pelvic survey, or if mobility checks and bowel assessment aren’t part of the protocol.

Scan Protocol And Reader Skill Change The Result

Transvaginal ultrasound often gives the clearest view of the uterus and ovaries. Some centers add specific maneuvers that look for adhesions and deep disease. A multidisciplinary consensus from the Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound recommends routine pelvic ultrasound include steps that improve screening for endometriosis, published in Radiology (SRU consensus on routine pelvic US).

Ultrasound is operator dependent. The person scanning decides where to linger, what angles to try, and whether organ mobility is tested. The reader decides if subtle tethering is meaningful. Different sites can produce very different reports from the same pelvis.

Common Reasons Endometriosis Gets Missed

Most misses come from a mix of disease pattern, technique, and scan limits.

Superficial Disease Often Leaves Little To See

Superficial or microscopic disease may cause real symptoms and still be invisible on imaging. A BMJ summary of NICE guidance states that superficial or microscopic endometriosis will not be identified by ultrasound in all cases, and a normal scan should not exclude endometriosis when symptoms fit. See the BMJ summary of updated NICE guidance.

Deep Lesions Can Hide Without Targeted Checks

Deep endometriosis can involve the uterosacral ligaments, rectovaginal space, bowel, or bladder. If the exam doesn’t assess mobility (often described as a sliding sign) or doesn’t look carefully at the posterior compartment, small nodules and tethering can be missed.

Practical Factors Can Reduce Visibility

Bowel gas can block sound waves. Pain can limit probe pressure and shorten time spent on tender spots. Body position and bladder filling can also change the view. None of this makes ultrasound pointless. It just explains why a normal report is common even in symptomatic people.

What Ultrasound Findings Can Still Be Helpful

Even when endometriosis isn’t directly visible, ultrasound can show clues that raise suspicion or guide next steps:

  • Endometrioma: A classic ovarian cyst pattern with “ground glass” echoes.
  • Reduced organ mobility: Ovaries or uterus that don’t move freely may be stuck by adhesions.
  • Posterior tenderness with tethering: A pattern that can point toward deep disease behind the uterus.
  • Hydrosalpinx: A fluid-filled tube that can appear with scarring and may matter for fertility planning.

If your report includes terms like “fixed,” “tethered,” “adhesions,” “endometrioma,” or “suspected deep endometriosis,” ask what that means for treatment planning and referral.

Table: What Ultrasound Can See Across Endometriosis Patterns

This table helps interpret what a scan can and can’t settle, based on the pattern being considered.

Finding Or Pattern Often Seen On Ultrasound? What A “Normal” Scan Can Miss
Ovarian endometrioma Often Small cysts or atypical cyst appearance
Deep endometriosis near rectum Sometimes Small nodules without a bowel-focused protocol
Uterosacral ligament involvement Sometimes Thin lesions or scarring that blends with normal tissue
Rectovaginal space nodules Sometimes Lesions obscured by bowel gas or limited probe pressure
Bladder involvement Sometimes Small lesions on the bladder surface
Peritoneal (superficial) implants Rarely Most superficial disease, including microscopic implants
Adhesions and fixation Sometimes Mild scarring without obvious movement restriction
Extra-pelvic disease Rarely Lesions outside typical pelvic windows

What To Do After A Normal Ultrasound When Symptoms Persist

If symptoms keep interfering with daily life, it helps to shift the question from “What did the scan show?” to “What problem are we solving next?” These steps often help.

Bring A Two-Cycle Symptom Log

Track bleeding days, pain days, pain location, bowel and bladder symptoms during periods, and pain with sex. Add what you tried and whether it helped. This gives your clinician a pattern to work with instead of a one-time memory.

Ask What Protocol Your Ultrasound Used

Keep it simple:

  1. Was it transvaginal, transabdominal, or both?
  2. Did it assess mobility or a sliding sign?
  3. Did it check behind the uterus and along the uterosacral ligaments?
  4. Did it comment on ovarian mobility or adhesions?

Know When MRI Can Add Detail

MRI can help map deep endometriosis and guide surgery planning in selected cases. It still won’t catch every superficial implant, but it can add detail in areas ultrasound struggles with when the protocol is built for endometriosis.

How To Ask For A More Targeted Ultrasound

If your first scan was a general pelvic ultrasound, you can ask whether a targeted endometriosis ultrasound is available locally. This is not a different machine. It’s a different set of questions during the exam.

When you book or at the visit, these phrases help clarify what you’re asking for:

  • “Can the scan assess ovarian mobility and a sliding sign?”
  • “Can it check the posterior compartment, including the rectovaginal space?”
  • “If bowel endometriosis is suspected, can the sonographer document any nodules or tethering?”
  • “Can the report state whether an endometrioma is seen and describe its features?”

If the answer is “no,” that still helps. It tells you that a referral to a center that runs this protocol may be a better use of time than repeating the same scan.

Other Conditions A Normal Ultrasound Can Help Rule Out

Part of the value of ultrasound is that it can catch other causes of pelvic pain that need a different plan. A “normal” report often means no obvious large fibroids, no large ovarian torsion risk cyst, and no clear pelvic mass. That doesn’t erase pain. It just narrows the field.

Two conditions that can overlap with endometriosis symptoms are adenomyosis and fibroids. Adenomyosis can be missed too, but sometimes ultrasound shows a bulky, tender uterus or a specific muscle texture pattern. Fibroids are often easier to see, especially when they are larger.

How Laparoscopy Fits In The Picture

Laparoscopy is a surgery that lets a clinician look inside the pelvis with a camera. It can confirm endometriosis by seeing lesions and, in many cases, treating them at the same time. It also carries the normal risks of surgery, so it’s not the first step for everyone.

Many clinicians use a staged approach: start with symptom history, pelvic exam, ultrasound, and a trial of medical treatment when appropriate. If symptoms stay strong, or fertility goals change the timeline, referral to a specialist and discussion of laparoscopy may be next.

ESHRE’s 2022 guideline describes diagnosis and management options across this spectrum, including how imaging and clinical suspicion fit into decision-making. See the ESHRE guideline on endometriosis.

Table: Next Steps After A Normal Ultrasound

Use this as a menu for a visit with a clinician. Which path fits depends on symptoms, pregnancy goals, and daily function.

Next Step When It Helps What It Usually Involves
Targeted endometriosis ultrasound Persistent symptoms after a routine scan Longer exam with mobility and posterior checks
Pelvic MRI with endometriosis protocol Suspicion of deep disease or surgery planning Imaging that maps lesions and scarring patterns
Medical treatment trial Symptoms fit endometriosis and imaging is negative Hormonal treatment or pain plan with follow-up
Pelvic floor physiotherapy Pelvic pain with muscle spasm or pain with sex Assessment and targeted exercises over visits
Referral to endometriosis specialist Severe symptoms, fertility concerns, complex pain Focused history, exam, and staged plan
Diagnostic laparoscopy Ongoing pain or infertility after other steps Keyhole surgery to look for and treat lesions

What A Normal Scan Can Still Give You

A normal ultrasound can still rule out some large problems, like a big ovarian cyst or a mass. It can also guide the next step: targeted ultrasound, MRI, a treatment trial with planned follow-up, or referral to a specialist who sees endometriosis daily.

If symptoms keep recurring, treat the ultrasound as one snapshot, not the full story. Your body’s pattern still counts.

References & Sources