ENDOMETRIOSIS SURGERY
- Elysara

- 20 minutes ago
- 3 min read

DOES IT CURE ENDOMETRIOSIS? IS IT RIGHT FOR YOU?
LAST WEEK WE SAW AN ALARMING TIK-TOK! IT WAS A WOMAN WHO WAS WAITING FOR AN APPOINTMENT WITH AN ENDOMETRIOSIS SURGEON. THEY SAID THE SURGEON IS BACKED UP...IT WILL BE 6 MONTHS BEFORE YOU CAN SEE HIM. SIX MONTHS GO BY AND SHE CHECKS IN WITH HER GYN, WHO TOLD HER THE REFERRAL APPOINTMENT WAS NEVER MADE! WHAT IS THAT ALL ABOUT????
Why Excision Surgery Is Only the First Step in Treatment
Excision surgery remains the gold standard for removing endometriosis lesions. It restores anatomy, reduces pain, and offers meaningful improvement in quality of life. However, excision alone does not address the full nature of the disease. Endometriosis is a systemic, inflammatory, immune-driven condition that affects multiple organs and cellular pathways. For this reason, long-term medical management is essential after surgery.
Many patients are never informed of this. They often leave the operating room believing they are finished with treatment, only to experience persistent symptoms, inflammatory flares, fatigue, or hormonal imbalances months later. The truth is that excision treats the lesions, but not the underlying dysfunction that allowed those lesions to grow.
This is the gap in women’s healthcare that needs to be closed.
Understanding Endometriosis as a Systemic Disease
Current research demonstrates that endometriosis involves widespread immune activation, chronic inflammation, hormonal disruption, and changes in cellular metabolism. This is why patients commonly experience symptoms far beyond the pelvis, including gastrointestinal dysfunction, bladder irritation, nerve pain, fatigue, migraines, and systemic inflammatory reactions.
Immune Dysregulation
Macrophages, cytokines, and inflammatory mediators remain activated even after lesions are removed. This can drive ongoing pain and flare-ups unless the immune system is supported and modulated.
Detoxification and Hormone Pathways
Impaired methylation, reduced liver clearance, and estrogen metabolism issues can allow hormonal imbalances and inflammation to persist.
Mitochondrial Dysfunction
Endometriosis is associated with mitochondrial stress, low ATP production, and increased oxidative burden. This contributes to fatigue, slower healing, and heightened inflammatory responses.
Nervous System Activation
Many patients experience a chronic fight-or-flight state, pelvic floor hypertonicity, and central sensitization. This means the nervous system continues to amplify pain signals even after surgical lesions are removed.
Why Post-Surgical Medical Care Is Critical
When patients are not placed into structured post-operative care, several patterns tend to emerge: persistent inflammation, hormonal imbalance, recurrence of symptoms, gut dysfunction, histamine sensitivity, nervous system dysregulation, and chronic immune flares. Endometriosis requires long-term clinical support, much like other chronic inflammatory or immune-mediated conditions. Surgery initiates healing, but medical management sustains it.
A Multidisciplinary Approach Is the Standard Patients Deserve
Effective long-term care integrates multiple specialties working together rather than a single provider addressing isolated symptoms. A comprehensive model includes:
Functional and Integrative Medical Management
Reducing inflammation, improving mitochondrial function, addressing nutrient deficiencies, supporting detoxification pathways.
Hormone Optimization
Bioidentical hormone therapy, when appropriate, can reduce inflammatory load and stabilize post-surgical symptoms.
IV Nutrient Therapy
NAD+, amino acids, antioxidants, and micronutrient infusions support cellular repair, immune function, and tissue recovery.
Nervous System and Pain Modulation
Pelvic floor therapy, acupuncture, fascia therapy, and neuromodulation techniques help calm pain pathways.
Nutrition and Gut-Based Interventions
Anti-inflammatory nutrition, Mediterranean-based dietary patterns, and targeted supplementation reduce systemic inflammation.
Immune-Modulating Therapies
Low-dose naltrexone, NAC, alpha-lipoic acid, and other orthomolecular therapies help regulate immune activation.
Emotional and Stress Support
Chronic illness impacts identity, relationships, and mental wellbeing. Integrating emotional support is crucial.
Closing the Gap in Women’s Healthcare
There is currently no fully coordinated endometriosis center that bridges gynecology, excision surgery, immune medicine, functional medicine, pelvic rehabilitation, nervous system care, and long-term follow-up. This gap leaves patients to navigate a complex disease on their own. Healing requires a knowledgeable, coordinated team—not a single intervention.
TRUST YOUR GYN, but understand they and their staff are overwhelmed with their workloads. YOU WILL FALL THROUGH THE CRACKS in the healthcare system.
ELYSARA Medical & Wellness is working to change this. Our focus is on building a multidisciplinary, long-term care model that supports patients before surgery, through recovery, and throughout the years that follow. Endometriosis affects the immune, hormonal, neurological, metabolic, and emotional systems. Effective treatment must address all of them.





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