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  Vol. 155 No. 9, 8 MAY 1995 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Intestinal Endometriosis Masquerading as Common Digestive Disorders

Monica Shah, MD; David Tager, MD; Edward Feller, MD

Arch Intern Med. 1995;155(9):977-980.


Abstract

Intestinal endometriosis mimics a wide variety of inflammatory, infectious, or neoplastic digestive diseases. To alert clinicians to its diverse manifestations, we describe nine patients who required laparotomy. The underlying diagnosis was elusive initially. In no case were symptoms clearly cyclic or temporally related to phases of the menstrual cycle. Presenting complaints included acute or subacute lower abdominal pain (three patients), hematochezia (two patients), signs or symptoms of small-bowel obstruction (two patients), peritonitis (one patient), and a partially obstructing sigmoid lesion (one patient). The findings of barium enema were nondiagnostic in the five cases in which it was performed. Surgery was needed in each case; indications included inability to exclude carcinoma (two patients), small-bowel obstruction (two patients), diffuse peritonitis (one patient), persistent colonic obstruction (one patient), pericolonic abscess (one patient), and intractable pain (one patient). Intestinal endometriosis has a diverse clinical spectrum, with nonspecific features in many patients. This disease should be considered during the evaluation of unexplained digestive complaints in women of childbearing years.

(Arch Intern Med. 1995;155:977-980)



Author Affiliations

From the Department of Medicine, The Miriam Hospital (Drs Shah, Tager, and Feller), and the Division of Gastroenterology, Brown University School of Medicine (Dr Feller), Providence, RI. Dr Shah is now with the Department of Medicine, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Md, and Dr Tager is with Woburn (Mass) Medical Associates.



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THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Experimental Endometriosis in the Rat Is Correlated With Colonic Motor Function Alterations but Not With Bacterial Load
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Reproductive Sciences 2007;14:815-824.
ABSTRACT  





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