Pelvic Pain in Women: Common Causes and When It Needs Medical Attention

Pelvic Pain in Women can come from the reproductive organs, urinary system, digestive tract, pelvic muscles, or nearby nerves. Some pain is mild and temporary, such as menstrual cramps or ovulation pain. But sudden, severe, repeated, or worsening pain needs medical attention, especially if it comes with fever, pregnancy, fainting, abnormal bleeding, vomiting, or unusual vaginal discharge.

Pelvic pain means discomfort in the lower abdomen or the area between the hips. It may feel sharp, dull, cramp-like, heavy, burning, or stabbing. The cause is not always gynaecological, which is why a proper assessment by a gynaecologist or qualified clinician is important. Mayo Clinic notes that pelvic pain may involve the reproductive, urinary, or digestive system, not only the uterus or ovaries.

Medical note: This blog is for information only and does not replace a consultation. Seek urgent care for severe pain, pregnancy related pain, fainting, heavy bleeding, high fever, or pain that feels unusual for you.

When Should Pelvic Pain Worry You?

Pelvic pain needs medical attention when it is sudden, severe, persistent, keeps returning, affects daily life, or appears with warning symptoms. Red flags include pregnancy or possible pregnancy, fainting, heavy or unusual vaginal bleeding, fever, vomiting, difficulty passing urine or stool, blood in urine or stool, or severe pain on one side. NHS guidance also lists blood in urine or stool, unusual vaginal bleeding or discharge, urinary pain, fever, nausea, vomiting, and possible pregnancy as reasons to seek urgent advice.

A gynaecology clinic can help identify whether the pain is linked to periods, ovulation, infection, ovarian cysts, fibroids, endometriosis, pregnancy related causes, urinary problems, bowel conditions, or pelvic floor issues.

What Does Pelvic Pain Feel Like?

Pelvic pain can feel different from person to person. Some women describe it as period-like cramps. Others feel pressure, heaviness, stabbing pain, burning, or pain that spreads to the back, thighs, or groin.

Chronic pelvic pain is usually defined as pain in the pelvic area lasting 6 months or longer. ACOG states that chronic pelvic pain can interfere with work, physical activity, sexual relationships, and daily life.

Common patterns include:

Pain Pattern Possible Meaning
Cramping before or during periods Menstrual cramps, endometriosis, adenomyosis, fibroids
One-sided sharp pain Ovulation pain, ovarian cyst, ectopic pregnancy, torsion
Burning with urination UTI, bladder irritation, kidney stone
Pain with bloating or bowel changes IBS, constipation, inflammatory bowel disease
Pain with fever or unusual discharge Pelvic infection or pelvic inflammatory disease
Deep ache lasting months Endometriosis, pelvic floor dysfunction, bladder pain syndrome

Mayo Clinic describes chronic pelvic pain as steady, intermittent, dull, sharp, cramping, or a feeling of pressure or heaviness deep in the pelvis. (Mayo Clinic)

Common Causes of Pelvic Pain in Women

Pelvic discomfort has many possible causes. Some are minor and improve with basic care. Others need testing, medication, or urgent treatment.

1. Menstrual Cramps

Menstrual cramps are one of the most common reasons for lower abdominal pain. They usually occur before or during periods and may improve with heat, rest, hydration, or pain relief recommended by a healthcare provider.

However, cramps are not always “normal.” Pain that is severe, worsening, newly different, or stopping school, work, sleep, or daily activity should be checked. Severe period pain can be linked with endometriosis, fibroids, adenomyosis, infection, or other gynaecological conditions.

2. Ovulation Pain

Some women feel mild one-sided pelvic pain around the middle of the menstrual cycle. This can happen when an ovary releases an egg. It may last a few hours or up to a couple of days.

Ovulation pain is usually not dangerous, but severe one-sided pain should not be ignored. A ruptured ovarian cyst, ectopic pregnancy, appendicitis, or ovarian torsion can sometimes feel similar and needs urgent assessment.

3. Endometriosis

Endometriosis happens when tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows outside the uterus. It can cause painful periods, pelvic pain outside periods, pain with bowel movements, pain during intimacy, bloating, fatigue, and fertility problems. WHO estimates that endometriosis affects about 10% of reproductive-age women and girls worldwide, around 190 million people.

Endometriosis pain can be cyclical, but it may also become constant. Some women are told for years that their pain is “just cramps,” even when symptoms are affecting daily life. Persistent or severe menstrual pain is a valid reason to see a gynaecologist.

4. Ovarian Cysts

Ovarian cysts are fluid-filled sacs that can form on or inside the ovary. Many are harmless and go away on their own. Others may grow, rupture, bleed, or twist the ovary.

A cyst may cause one-sided pelvic pain, bloating, pressure, pain during movement, or sudden sharp pain. Sudden severe pain with nausea, vomiting, dizziness, or fainting needs urgent care because it may suggest rupture, bleeding, or ovarian torsion.

5. Pelvic Inflammatory Disease

Pelvic inflammatory disease, or PID, is an infection of the female reproductive organs. It can cause lower abdominal or pelvic pain, unusual vaginal discharge, bleeding between periods, pain during intimacy, fever, or pain while urinating. CDC guidance notes that PID can be subtle or nonspecific, and some women may have mild symptoms or no symptoms.

PID needs timely treatment because untreated infection can lead to long-term pelvic pain, fertility problems, or ectopic pregnancy risk. If pelvic pain comes with fever, discharge, or bleeding outside periods, a medical visit should not be delayed.

6. Urinary Tract Infection or Bladder Pain

A urinary tract infection can cause pelvic pressure, lower abdominal pain, burning while passing urine, frequent urination, cloudy urine, or blood in urine. Pain may worsen if infection spreads toward the kidneys.

Bladder pain syndrome can cause long-term pelvic pain, bladder pressure, and frequent urination even when infection tests are negative. Because urinary and gynaecological symptoms can overlap, testing is often needed.

7. Digestive Causes: IBS, Constipation, Appendicitis

Not all pelvic pain starts in the reproductive organs. Constipation, gas, irritable bowel syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, food intolerance, and appendicitis can cause pain in the lower abdomen or pelvis.

Appendicitis can begin as vague abdominal pain and later move toward the lower right side. Pain with fever, vomiting, worsening tenderness, or inability to walk comfortably needs urgent evaluation.

8. Fibroids or Adenomyosis

Fibroids are non-cancerous growths in or around the uterus. They may cause heavy periods, pressure, pelvic heaviness, frequent urination, constipation, back pain, or pain during periods.

Adenomyosis happens when tissue similar to the uterine lining grows into the muscular wall of the uterus. It can cause heavy bleeding, painful periods, and a bulky or tender uterus. A gynaecology assessment and ultrasound can help identify these conditions.

9. Pregnancy-Related Causes

Pelvic pain during pregnancy should be assessed carefully, especially if it is severe, one-sided, or linked with bleeding, dizziness, shoulder-tip pain, or fainting.

Ectopic pregnancy happens when a pregnancy grows outside the uterus, usually in a fallopian tube. It can be life-threatening if not treated. Any person with pelvic pain and a possible pregnancy should seek urgent medical advice.

10. Pelvic Floor Muscle Pain

The pelvic floor muscles support the bladder, bowel, and uterus. If these muscles become tight, weak, injured, or overactive, they can cause pelvic pressure, pain with sitting, urinary symptoms, constipation, or pain during intimacy.

Pelvic floor dysfunction is often overlooked. Treatment may include pelvic floor physiotherapy, guided relaxation, posture changes, and care for related bladder, bowel, or gynaecological problems.

Acute vs Chronic Pelvic Pain: What Is the Difference?

Type Meaning Examples When to Seek Care
Acute pelvic pain Starts suddenly or recently Ovarian cyst rupture, ectopic pregnancy, appendicitis, infection Same day or urgent care if severe
Cyclical pelvic pain Linked with menstrual cycle Period cramps, ovulation pain, endometriosis If severe, worsening, or affecting life
Chronic pelvic pain Lasts 6 months or longer Endometriosis, bladder pain, IBS, pelvic floor dysfunction Book a full assessment
Recurrent pelvic pain Comes and goes repeatedly Ovarian cysts, IBS, infections, fibroids Needs evaluation if repeated

Chronic pelvic pain is common and can be complex. StatPearls reports overall prevalence estimates of about 4% to 16% among women, while noting that only about one-third of affected women seek medical care.

Red Flags: When Pelvic Pain Needs Medical Attention

Seek urgent medical care if pelvic pain is associated with:

Red Flag Why It Matters
Sudden severe pain Could be cyst rupture, torsion, appendicitis, ectopic pregnancy
Pregnancy or possible pregnancy Ectopic pregnancy must be ruled out
Fainting, dizziness, weakness May suggest internal bleeding or severe infection
Heavy or unusual vaginal bleeding Needs prompt assessment
Fever or chills May suggest infection
Vomiting with severe pain Can occur with torsion, appendicitis, infection
Blood in urine or stool May indicate urinary, bowel, or other serious causes
New pelvic pain after menopause Needs medical review
Unexplained weight loss or persistent bloating Needs evaluation for serious disease

MSD Manual lists concerning red flags for female pelvic pain, including fainting or shock, signs of internal bleeding, abdominal guarding or rigidity, fever or chills, and other signs that may indicate urgent causes.

How a Gynaecologist Diagnoses Pelvic Pain

A gynaecologist will usually start by asking about the location, timing, severity, and pattern of pain. Details matter. Is the pain related to periods? Does it happen during urination or bowel movements? Is there abnormal bleeding, discharge, fever, nausea, bloating, or pregnancy possibility?

Common evaluation steps may include:

Test or Assessment Why It May Be Done
Medical history Finds pattern, triggers, cycle link, infection risk
Abdominal and pelvic exam Checks tenderness, masses, discharge, pelvic floor pain
Pregnancy test Rules out pregnancy-related emergencies
Urine test Checks UTI, blood, kidney stone signs
Vaginal swab or STI test Checks infection or PID causes
Ultrasound Looks at uterus, ovaries, cysts, fibroids
Blood tests Checks infection, anemia, inflammation
Referral or imaging Used when bowel, urinary, or complex causes are suspected

Not every patient needs every test. The right plan depends on age, symptoms, pregnancy possibility, menstrual history, examination findings, and red flags.

Treatment: How to Make Pelvic Pain Go Away

The best treatment depends on the cause. Pelvic pain is a symptom, not a diagnosis.

For mild pain that feels like usual period cramps, home care may include rest, fluids, a warm compress, gentle movement, and pain medicine recommended by a healthcare professional. Avoid self-medicating if you are pregnant, may be pregnant, have kidney disease, stomach ulcers, liver disease, heavy bleeding, or allergies to pain medicines.

Medical treatment may include:

Cause Possible Treatment Approach
Menstrual cramps Heat, anti-inflammatory medicine if safe, hormonal options
Endometriosis Pain control, hormonal therapy, imaging, sometimes surgery
PID or infection Antibiotics and follow-up care
UTI Urine testing and antibiotics if bacterial infection is confirmed
Ovarian cyst Observation, ultrasound follow-up, urgent care if severe
Fibroids Medication, monitoring, procedures if severe
IBS or constipation Diet changes, bowel care, medical review
Pelvic floor dysfunction Pelvic floor physiotherapy and guided exercises

Do not ignore pain that is getting worse, spreading, or becoming more frequent. Pain relief without diagnosis can delay care for infections, pregnancy-related complications, appendicitis, or ovarian torsion.

Why Do I Have Stabbing Pelvic Pain Without a Period?

Stabbing pelvic pain without a period can happen for several reasons. Possible causes include ovulation pain, ovarian cyst, urinary tract infection, kidney stone, constipation, appendicitis, pelvic infection, endometriosis, pelvic floor spasm, or pregnancy-related causes.

The timing gives clues. Pain in the middle of the cycle may be ovulation. Burning urine points toward urinary infection. Fever or unusual discharge may suggest infection. One-sided severe pain with nausea or dizziness needs urgent care.

A missed or delayed period with pelvic pain should be treated carefully. Take a pregnancy test if pregnancy is possible and seek urgent care if the pain is severe, one-sided, or associated with bleeding or faintness.

Could Pelvic Pain Be Cancer?

Most pelvic pain is not cancer. However, persistent pelvic or abdominal pain should be checked, especially when it is new, worsening, frequent, or associated with bloating, feeling full quickly, appetite loss, urinary urgency, unexplained weight loss, or abnormal bleeding.

NHS lists ovarian cancer symptoms such as frequent bloating, pelvic or abdominal pain, feeling full quickly, appetite changes, and needing to urinate more often or urgently. Cancer Research UK also advises seeing a doctor for symptoms that are unusual for you or do not go away.

Cancer-related pelvic pain does not have one specific feeling. It may feel dull, heavy, persistent, pressure-like, or sometimes sharp. The important warning sign is not the exact pain type, but persistence, change from normal, and associated symptoms.

When to Visit a Gynaecology Clinic

Book a consultation with a gynaecologist if:

  • Pelvic pain keeps coming back
  • Period pain is severe or worsening
  • Pain affects school, work, sleep, or daily routine
  • You have pain during urination, bowel movements, or intimacy
  • You have unusual vaginal discharge or bleeding
  • You feel pelvic pressure, bloating, or heaviness often
  • Pain continues even after your period ends
  • You have difficulty getting pregnant with pelvic pain

At Karuna City Clinic, patients can seek medical evaluation for pelvic pain and discuss symptoms with a qualified clinician. For safety, urgent or severe symptoms should be treated as emergency concerns rather than routine appointments.

What to Track Before Your Appointment

A symptom diary can make diagnosis easier. Track:

What to Note Example
Pain location Left side, right side, center, lower back
Pain type Sharp, dull, burning, cramping, pressure
Pain timing Before period, during period, after period, mid-cycle
Bleeding pattern Heavy, irregular, spotting, postmenopausal
Urinary symptoms Burning, frequency, blood in urine
Bowel symptoms Constipation, diarrhea, bloating, blood in stool
Other symptoms Fever, nausea, discharge, fatigue
Pregnancy possibility Missed period, positive test, contraception history

This information helps the doctor decide whether the pain is likely gynaecological, urinary, digestive, muscular, or related to another cause.

FAQ: Pelvic Pain in Women

What can cause pelvic pain in a female?

Pelvic pain in a female can be caused by menstrual cramps, ovulation, endometriosis, ovarian cysts, fibroids, pelvic inflammatory disease, pregnancy-related problems, UTI, kidney stones, constipation, IBS, appendicitis, or pelvic floor muscle problems. Mayo Clinic notes that pelvic pain can come from reproductive, urinary, or digestive systems.

What are the red flags for pelvic pain?

Red flags include sudden severe pain, pregnancy or possible pregnancy, fainting, dizziness, heavy bleeding, fever, vomiting, unusual vaginal discharge, blood in urine or stool, difficulty urinating or passing stool, and new pelvic pain after menopause. These symptoms need same-day medical attention.

How to make pelvic pain go away?

Pelvic pain goes away when the cause is treated. Mild period-like pain may improve with rest, heat, fluids, and safe pain relief. Persistent, severe, one-sided, or recurring pain needs medical evaluation. Treatment may involve antibiotics, hormonal treatment, pelvic physiotherapy, bowel care, urinary treatment, or surgery depending on the diagnosis.

Why do I have stabbing pain in my pelvic area without a period?

Stabbing pelvic pain without a period may be due to ovulation, ovarian cyst, UTI, kidney stone, constipation, appendicitis, pelvic infection, endometriosis, pelvic floor spasm, or pregnancy-related causes. Severe one-sided stabbing pain, especially with vomiting, dizziness, fever, or bleeding, needs urgent care.

What does cancerous pelvic pain feel like?

Cancerous pelvic pain does not have one specific feeling. It may feel persistent, dull, heavy, pressure-like, or sharp. More concerning signs include ongoing bloating, feeling full quickly, appetite loss, urinary changes, unexplained weight loss, or abnormal bleeding. Persistent symptoms should be checked by a doctor.

Key Takeaway

Pelvic pain is common, but it should not be dismissed. Some causes are simple and temporary, while others need urgent care or long-term management. If pain is severe, unusual, persistent, or linked with red flags, consult a gynaecologist or visit a trusted gynaecology clinic for proper diagnosis and treatment.


Concerned about pelvic pain? Book a consultation with a gynaecologist at Karuna City Clinic for a medical evaluation and guidance based on your symptoms.

Author Bio

Prepared by: Karuna City Clinic Gynaecology Team
Medical Review Recommended By: Dr. Bhaba Malla Shrestha, Sr. Consultant Obs/Gyn (Infertility Specialist)
Last Updated: May 2026

This article is intended for patient education and should be medically reviewed by a licensed gynaecologist before publication.

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