Incidental Abdominal Wall Mass Diagnosed As Endometriosis: A Rare Finding in an Increasingly Common Pathology
This case report highlights a rare instance of incidental abdominal wall endometriosis discovered during a hysterectomy for abnormal uterine bleeding, emphasizing the need for increased clinical awareness of this condition's diverse presentations.
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This Cureus case report describes a 51-year-old perimenopausal G2P2 woman who presented to the emergency department with heavy vaginal bleeding and severe anemia (hemoglobin 5.4), prompting transfusion and an evaluation for common causes such as fibroids, adenomyosis, endometrial hyperplasia, and malignancy. Imaging showed a fibroid uterus with otherwise noncontributory findings, and she underwent a supracervical subtotal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy; during surgery, an incidental abdominal wall mass was partially resected and later diagnosed on pathology as abdominal wall endometriosis. The paper emphasizes that abdominal wall endometriosis is rare and may be clinically overlooked, noting that lack of cyclic pain made hernia, abscess, and tumor more aligned with the initial differential, and that diagnostic certainty relied on surgical pathology. This paper is centrally about endometriosis — specifically an incidental abdominal wall endometriosis mass discovered during surgery for abnormal uterine bleeding.
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References (5)
- Abdominal Wall Endometriosis: Clinical Presentation and Imaging Features with Emphasis on Sonography via openalex
- Classification of endometriosis via openalex
- The Main Theories on the Pathogenesis of Endometriosis via openalex
- The Many Guises of Endometriosis: Giant Abdominal Wall Endometriosis Masquerading as An Incisional Hernia. via openalex
- Treatment of Endometriosis-Associated Pain with Elagolix, an Oral GnRH Antagonist via openalex
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- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-06-13T17:20:28.795615+00:00
- openalex
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- pmc
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- pubmed
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