The Sonata System is a minimally-invasive, ultrasound-guided transcervical fibroid ablation procedure for management of symptomatic uterine fibroids. Since its approval by the U.S Food and Drug Administration in 2018, this procedure has demonstrated an excellent safety profile and post-procedure satisfaction rate. We present the case of a patient treated with Sonata, who subsequently developed bacterial sepsis and Asherman’s syndrome – serious complications with long-term sequelae and implications for fertility. A nulligravid woman in her 40s presented in the outpatient setting with dysmenorrhea and bulk symptoms, with imaging showing an enlarged myomatous uterus compressing the urinary bladder. She desired minimally-invasive, fertility-preserving management and underwent the Sonata procedure at an outside hospital. On post-operative day 3, she was admitted to our institution with abdominal pain, fever, tachycardia, and Enterococcus faecalis bacteremia. Despite 6 days of culture-directed antibiotic therapy, the patient remained septic with worsening symptoms and imaging findings, and with persistent bacteremia. On hospital day 7, the patient underwent laparoscopic myomectomy and excision of hemorrhagic, infected myometrium. She recovered appropriately after surgery and was discharged home on hospital day 11 to continue 2 weeks of intravenous antibiotics. Nine months after myomectomy, the patient was diagnosed with Asherman’s syndrome. She subsequently had an early pregnancy loss with retained products of conception, requiring hysteroscopic lysis of adhesions and dilation and curettage. Ultimately, careful patient selection is critical for the optimal application of the Sonata procedure. Limiting the extent of fibroid necrosis after treatment is a reasonable goal to minimize the risk of secondary bacterial infection and adhesiogenesis as procedural sequelae.Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.