You find yourself mapping out bathroom locations before you go anywhere. You wake up multiple times at night to urinate. You feel an urgency to go even when you know you don’t need to. The sensation of pressure in your lower abdomen is almost constant. You’ve been tested for urinary tract infections more than once and each time the results are negative. Something else is going on.
For women with uterine fibroids, urinary symptoms — including frequent urination, urgency, and a persistent sense of pelvic pressure or fullness — are among the most disruptive and least recognized manifestations of the condition. When fibroids grow large enough or in locations that exert pressure on the bladder, they can reduce the bladder’s functional capacity and cause constant urgency, even when the bladder is not full.
At Seamless Medical Centers in Port Arthur, TX, Dr. Zagum Bhatti, Board-Certified Interventional Radiologist, helps women across the Golden Triangle — Port Arthur, Beaumont, Orange, Nederland, Vidor, and surrounding communities — understand whether fibroids are the cause of their bladder symptoms. UFE information for Port Arthur patients.
How Fibroids Cause Urinary Symptoms
The uterus sits directly behind the bladder in the pelvis. When fibroids cause the uterus to enlarge — particularly when they grow anteriorly, toward the bladder — they can compress the bladder and reduce its effective capacity. A compressed bladder triggers the sensation of needing to urinate at lower volumes than normal, creating the feeling of constant urgency even when the actual urine volume is small.
Larger fibroids can also compress the ureters — the tubes that carry urine from the kidneys to the bladder — though this is less common. The bulk and weight of an enlarged, fibroid-containing uterus can cause the general pelvic pressure, heaviness, and lower abdominal fullness that many fibroid patients describe as one of their most persistent and disruptive symptoms.
For women in Lumberton, Silsbee, Bridge City, Groves, and surrounding Southeast Texas communities who have been managing these symptoms for months, recognizing that the bladder is not the primary problem — the fibroid-containing uterus pressing on it is — reframes what treatment actually needs to address.
Fibroid Urinary Symptoms vs. Other Causes
Urinary urgency and frequency without a confirmed infection is often diagnosed as overactive bladder syndrome and treated with medications that relax the bladder muscle. For women with fibroids, this approach treats a symptom rather than the underlying cause. If overactive bladder medications have not provided adequate relief and fibroids are present on imaging, the fibroid-related bladder compression is likely contributing to or causing the symptoms.
After UFE, as fibroids shrink over the following months, many women notice significant improvement in their urinary symptoms as the mechanical pressure on the bladder decreases. Frequent urination at night often improves as well. Learn about the full range of UFE results and recovery.
Frequently Asked Questions About Fibroids and Urinary Symptoms
Can fibroids cause urinary problems even if I don’t have heavy periods?
Yes. Urinary symptoms can be the dominant or even the only significant symptom in some women with fibroids, particularly when the fibroids are large or positioned anteriorly toward the bladder. Not all women with fibroids experience heavy periods as their primary symptom.
How do I know if my urinary symptoms are from fibroids or something else?
A pelvic ultrasound can identify fibroids and assess their size and position relative to the bladder. If fibroids are present and large or positioned anteriorly, fibroid-related bladder compression is a likely contributor. Urologic evaluation to rule out bladder or urethral causes is also appropriate if symptoms are significant.
Will removing the fibroids fix my urinary symptoms?
When fibroid bulk is the primary cause of urinary symptoms, treatment that reduces fibroid size — including UFE — often produces meaningful improvement in urinary frequency and urgency as the pressure on the bladder decreases. The degree of improvement depends on how much of the bladder compression is attributable to the fibroids versus other factors.
Are patients from Louisiana able to access care at Seamless Medical Centers?
Yes. Patients from Lake Charles, Sulphur, and western Louisiana regularly access care at our Port Arthur location, which is significantly closer than traveling to Baton Rouge or New Orleans for specialist interventional radiology care. Insurance coordination for out-of-state patients is available.
Schedule Your Consultation
Contact Seamless Medical Centers to schedule a consultation at our Port Arthur office. Learn more about UFE in Southeast Texas. Phone: 409-213-9575. Address: 3300 Jimmy Johnson Blvd, Suite #130, Port Arthur, Texas 77642.
Medical Disclaimer
Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only and should not replace professional medical advice. Treatment decisions should be made in consultation with qualified healthcare providers.
Published by Seamless Medical Centers | Clinical information reflects the expertise of Dr. Zagum Bhatti, MD, Board-Certified Interventional Radiologist, Founder of Seamless Medical Centers

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