Your symptoms are less typical of Asherman's
Based on your answers, your symptoms don't closely match the most common presentation of Asherman's syndrome. That said, Asherman's can present in subtle and atypical ways — and if something still feels wrong to you, that matters.
Your answers suggest a lower symptom overlap with Asherman's syndrome. Keep reading — understanding the full picture means you can advocate for yourself if things change.
- Your period changes appear within the expected range
- Fewer high-risk procedure history markers
- Symptoms may be related to other hormonal or cycle conditions
Some of your symptoms are consistent with Asherman's
Your answers show a meaningful overlap with Asherman's syndrome symptoms. This doesn't mean you definitely have it — but it does mean it's worth understanding more, and potentially worth raising with a specialist.
A moderate symptom overlap with Asherman's. Many women at this level are dismissed by doctors — but the patterns you're describing deserve proper investigation.
- Period changes that could indicate reduced uterine lining
- History of uterine procedures that are known risk factors
- Symptoms that may not be explained by other common conditions
Your symptoms are strongly consistent with Asherman's syndrome
I want to be honest with you: your answers show a strong pattern of symptoms that align closely with Asherman's syndrome. I'm not here to diagnose you — only a hysteroscopy can do that — but I would strongly encourage you to pursue proper investigation. You deserve answers.
High symptom overlap with Asherman's syndrome. The combination of symptoms you've described — especially changes to your period after a procedure — is the classic presentation that too many doctors miss.
- Significant changes to period flow or absence of period
- History of one or more uterine procedures (D&C, hysteroscopy, C-section)
- Fertility challenges or unexplained pregnancy loss
- Cyclical pain without bleeding — a key marker of adhesions
What to do right now: Ask your GP or gynaecologist for a hysteroscopy — not just an ultrasound. An ultrasound can miss adhesions entirely. The only way to definitively diagnose Asherman's is to look inside the uterine cavity directly. If they push back, Chapter 2 of the guide gives you the exact language to use.