Course overview
Use pattern recognition and referral discipline when bowel or urinary symptoms sit inside an endometriosis history.
This course is for clinicians who need a practical frame for differentiating overlap symptoms from suspected deep disease, avoiding diagnostic minimization, and matching the patient to the right imaging, service, and management path.
What this course keeps visible
Keeps cyclical GI and urinary symptoms visible as potential endometriosis presentations, and separates overlap management from referral-worthy deep disease suspicion.
How it uses guidance
Uses current ultrasound and referral guidance rather than watchful dismissal, and supports conservative but decisive patient counseling.
Working principles
Do not normalize cyclical GI or urinary symptoms away. Do not over-assign every bowel symptom to deep disease. Escalate when pattern, severity, or treatment failure justifies it.
Keep the explanation coherent
Keep the patient-facing explanation coherent and calm, so overlap and deep disease are both held in the same conversation rather than fragmented across specialties.
Quick start: GI-overlap, low structural suspicion
Start with Modules 1, 2, and 5 when bloating, constipation, diarrhoea, food-linked symptoms, and cyclical worsening are present but the immediate question is overlap management. Send: Endo Belly and Low-FODMAP-Friendly Balanced Meals.
Quick start: deep bowel disease suspicion
Start with Modules 1, 3, and 4 when painful bowel motions, rectal pain, cyclical rectosigmoid-type symptoms, or prior imaging raise concern for deep disease. Send: Bowel and Bladder Symptom Guide.
Quick start: urinary phenotype or bladder involvement concern
Start with Modules 1, 3, and 5 when pain passing urine, urgency, cyclical urinary symptoms, or haematuria with menses raise concern for bladder or ureter involvement. Send: Bowel and Bladder Symptom Guide.
Quick start: recurrent symptoms after prior management
Start with Modules 4 and 6 when empirical treatment has not restored function and the next decision is repeat medical management versus imaging, referral, or specialist review. Send: Symptom Tracking and Appointment Prep.
Cycle-linked bowel or urinary symptoms should prompt joined-up thinking early
The key clinical move is not to decide instantly whether the symptom is “GI,” “bladder,” or “endo.” It is to decide whether the pattern justifies empirical support alone or a deeper imaging and referral pathway.